Search Site

Trends banner

ADNOC shifts OMV stake to XRG

XRG is ADNOC's wholly-owned international investment company.

SIB H1 net profit $189m

The bank's total assets increased by $1.49 billion.

TSMC’s H1 revenue up 40 percent

Robust demand for AI technology behind the surge.

‘Wadeem’ sold out for $1.49bn

This is the highest Abu Dhabi real-estate release to date.

Tesla Q2 sales down 13.5%

Shares rally after the disclosure, better than some forecasts.

Lebanese man who took bank staff hostage let off

PM Najib Mikati praised the army on the "great effort deployed to release him and arrest those involved in the kidnapping."
  • A judicial official said that Hussein has since been released but still faces possible charges by the state
  • The state media reported that he took the drastic action to access his savings so he could pay for surgery for his father

A Lebanese man who held bank staff hostage in Beirut last week to demand access to his trapped savings has been released from custody after charges against him were dropped.

Judge Ghassan al-Khoury ordered the release of Bassam al-Sheikh Hussein, who stormed a Federal Bank branch in Beirut with a rifle, after the bank dropped the charges against him, the state-run National News Agency reported on Tuesday.

A judicial official told AFP on Wednesday that Hussein has since been released but still faces possible charges by the state.

Following an hours-long standoff last Thursday, Hussein turned himself in after the bank agreed to let him draw out $30,000 of his more than $200,000 in trapped savings, media reports said.

He took the drastic action to access his savings so he could pay for surgery for his father, state media reported.

The incident was the latest between Lebanese banks and angry depositors unable to access savings that have been frozen since 2019.

Hussein has been hailed as a hero by many in Lebanon who blame the country’s political and banking elite for a financial crisis branded by the World Bank as one of the worst in modern times.

In a report this month, the World Bank blamed authorities for misusing and misspending people’s deposits over the past 30 years, accusing them of a “Ponzi” scheme approach to public finance that benefited key political and economic actors at the expense of regular depositors.

“The government consistently and acutely departed from orderly and disciplined fiscal policy to serve the larger purpose of cementing political economy interests,” it said, calling the economic crisis a “deliberate depression.”