US-sanctioned Lebanese bank self-liquidates

US-sanctioned Lebanese bank self-liquidates
Washington had slapped heavy financial sanctions on Jammal Trust Bank, which was accused of acting as a key financial institution for Hezbollah.
2 min read
19 September, 2019
Washington slapped heavy financial sanctions on JTB [AFP]
Lebanon's Central Bank announced on Thursday it had agreed to the self-liquidation request it received from a bank hit by US sanctions last month over ties with Lebanese Shia movement Hezbollah.

"Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh announced today he approved the request made by Jammal Trust Bank SAL," the Lebanese state-run National News Agency reported.

On 29 August, Washington slapped heavy financial sanctions on JTB, which was accused of acting as a key financial institution for Hezbollah.

The US Treasury said the bank was used for enabling several of the Shia militant group's financial activities, "including sending payments to families of suicide bombers."

The news agency quoted Salameh as stressing that the value of the bank's assets and of its contribution to the national deposit guarantee body were sufficient "in principle" to pay back all deposits and fulfill obligations.

Iran-backed Hezbollah has been a US-designated terrorist group since 1997 and fights alongside the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the neighbouring country's civil war.

It is Tehran's most potent proxy on the regional scene and also wields significant influence in Lebanese politics.

One of a handful of Shia-owned Lebanese banks, JTB had specialised in micro-credit in remote areas of the country's Shia-majority south, which is also Hezbollah's heartland.

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