Lebanon are due to sign a new central bank forensic audit contract within days, amid the country's financial crisis

The country will sign the contract with Alvarez & Marsal within days, as their financial collapse has deepened
2 min read
14 September, 2021
Lebanon is to sign the new contract for a forensic audit of the central bank soon, as Lebanese officials agreed they must tackle the country's financial crisis [Getty]

Lebanon will sign a new contract for a forensic audit of the central bank with Alvarez & Marsal (A&M) within days, the outgoing finance minister Ghazi Wazni said on Tuesday, signalling a renewed push to deliver on a key donor demand.

Wazni spoke at a ceremony handing control of the ministry to incoming Finance Minister Youssef Khalil, part of the government agreed on Friday that must tackle one of the worst financial meltdowns in history.

Wazni, who took part in IMF talks last year, said opposition in Lebanon to IMF negotiations had disappeared since then, and everybody now viewed IMF negotiations as inevitable.

Last year's IMF talks were derailed when politicians and the banking sector disputed the scale of financial losses mapped out in a financial recovery plan drawn up by the government.

Since then, Lebanon's financial collapse has deepened: more than three quarters of the population are now in poverty, the currency has lost 90% of its value, and the country is paralysed by fuel shortages.

Wazni said an IMF programme was the only way out of the crisis. "When we started negotiating with the Fund in March 2020, the majority were against this, and today everyone views negotiations with it as inevitable," Wazni said.

MENA
Live Story

The new government led by Prime Minister Najib Mikati was agreed on Friday after a year of political fighting over cabinet seats. Mikati has said he will seek talks with the IMF.

Khalil, the new finance minister, served as a senior central bank official and is close to its veteran governor Riad Salameh. He also took part in Lebanon's meetings with the IMF last year.

Like Wazni, he was approved by Shi'ite Muslim parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, one of Lebanon's most powerful politicians.

The plan for an audit, a key requirement for Lebanon to secure vital foreign aid, hit a roadblock in November when restructuring consultancy A&M withdrew, saying it had not received information it needed from the central bank.

The finance ministry said in April the central bank had agreed to hand over documents required by A&M.

Khalil, speaking alongside Wazni, said failure in his new role was not an option, saying it would only exacerbate Lebanon's problems. 

(Reuters)