Currencies

‘The magician’: Riad Salameh and the plundering of Lebanon


In June 2021, as Lebanon was in the throes of a debilitating financial crisis, the country’s central bank governor touched down at Paris’s Le Bourget airport by private jet, where customs officials found him carrying large amounts of undeclared cash.

Riad Salameh, who also has French citizenship, initially told border agents that he was carrying only €15,000. But searching his luggage, they instead found €84,430 and $7,710. Asked to justify the undeclared sums, he said he had simply “forgotten” that the cash — his own — was in his bag, police records show.

That the public face of Lebanon’s financial implosion could seemingly forget about $100,000 when millions of Lebanese were locked out of their life savings since the collapse of the country’s banking system two years earlier, demonstrates the deep chasm between his lifestyle and that of most in 2021. While Salameh spent lavishly on private jets and alleged paramours, Lebanese saw the value of their savings plummet, civil servant salaries now worth less than $100 a month. 

Appointed in 1993, Salameh helped build a rentier economy from the ashes of Lebanon’s devastating civil war. He was praised for steadying the country through years of instability, his cosy relationships with the political and banking elites and powerful foreign patrons ensuring very few questions were asked of his unorthodox financial tools.

Leaving the bank’s offices for the last time in July, the 73-year-old was cheered by a small crowd of supporters. But his reputation is now in tatters, his thirty-year tenure at the Banque du Liban tarnished by accusations that he helped lead the country down its path to ruin. The financial system he helped craft has since been likened to a Ponzi scheme, one which impoverished three-quarters of the population but left its wealthiest — himself included — largely unscathed. 

Meanwhile, he is the focus of judicial investigations in Lebanon, the US and at least seven European countries probing allegations of financial crimes. Two of them have warrants out for his arrest. On August 10, he was sanctioned by the US, UK and Canada. The US attorney’s office in the Southern District of New York has also opened an investigation into Salameh, the FT has learned. An SDNY spokesperson declined to comment.

His rise and fall mirrors that of his country, one blighted by decades of hubris, deceit and corruption, now mired in what the World Bank has called one of the world’s worst economic depressions, “orchestrated by the country’s elite that has long captured the state and lived off its economic rents.”

The police report from Le Bourget is among a range of documents the Financial Times has reviewed from European and Lebanese judicial investigations, probing allegations that Salameh engaged in financial practices “to the detriment of the state”, laundered money, engaged in fiscal fraud and embezzled public funds. These include court and police reports, financial records, auditors’ reports, company balance sheets, real estate contracts as well as transcripts of witness testimonies of those in Salameh’s orbit.

Riad Salameh greets employees on his last working day as the head of Lebanon’s central bank in Beirut on July 31
Riad Salameh greets employees on his last day as the head of Lebanon’s central bank in Beirut on July 31 © Wael Hamzeh/EPA-EFE

The FT has verified the documents’ authenticity and, where possible, has supplemented them with interviews of key figures. Together, they provide a comprehensive view of how he allegedly abused the powers of his office for personal gain and demonstrate a pattern of embroiling his family in his financial affairs. 

Along with his brother Raja, Salameh is accused of siphoning off at least $330mn in public funds, laundering those through a maze of international bank accounts and offshore accounts tied to his family and rumoured mistresses, buying up luxurious properties from Munich to New York, and defrauding the central bank into renting overpriced office space in Paris from a company he owns.

The documents also underline Salameh’s vast influence on Lebanon’s banking sector, with investigators suggesting he colluded with commercial banks for mutual benefit through “suspicious transactions”, interest-free loans and “arrangements to obscure losses.” Investigators in Europe are also looking into the extent to which banks were involved in these schemes.

Announcing sanctions against him, the US Treasury said Salameh’s litany of alleged crimes “contributed to Lebanon’s endemic corruption and perpetuated the perception that elites in Lebanon need not abide by the same rules that apply to all Lebanese people”.

Salameh, who has long denied all allegations of misconduct, declined to comment to the FT on the ongoing investigations, as he “respects the law and the secrecy of interrogations”.

‘Financial engineering’

Salameh took up office in 1993, appointed by Lebanon’s dynamic postwar premier Rafik Hariri. Unlike his predecessors, Salameh came from the world of finance: he had managed Hariri’s portfolio while working as an investment banker at Merrill Lynch in Paris.

The men worked in tandem to usher in Lebanon’s economic revival following 15 years of devastating civil war. Lebanon’s financial system continued to rely predominantly on foreign inflows from Gulf Arab states and wealthy Lebanese citizens, and exploited its banking secrecy laws.

To keep borrowing rates affordable and finance Hariri’s reconstruction plans, the duo fixed the Lebanese pound at 1,507 to the dollar, where it remained until February. Three decades on, economists point to Salameh’s decision to maintain that fixed exchange rate whatever the cost, as the root of the current rot as the system was entirely dependent on incoming dollars.

A female protestor holds her hand up in Beirut while facing a wall of soldiers
Protesters chant slogans against central bank governor Riad Salameh in Beirut in 2021. Millions of Lebanese citizens were locked out of their life savings following the collapse of the country’s banking system in 2019 © Hussam Shbaro/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

For years, Lebanon rebuilt but lived far beyond its means, its debt-to-GDP ratio averaging 150 per cent — one of the world’s highest — for most of the past two decades. Salameh was soon nicknamed “the magician” as the economy remained resilient through periods of conflict and political mayhem. 

Meanwhile, the BdL stopped publishing profit-and-loss statements, instead announcing year-on-year gains through accounting tricks, findings echoed in a recent forensic audit of the BdL.

His influence grew among foreign patrons, bankers, and political elites. Senior banking sources and ex-BdL employees say Salameh “ran the [BdL] like an emperor”, and judicial documents claim he had “absolute control” over its operations. He also leveraged bailouts and favourable loan terms to win over politically connected bankers.

The flow of Gulf money began slowing after years of instability, including a 2006 war between Hizbollah and Israel and the war in Syria. Salameh turned to what he called “financial engineering”: incentivising commercial banks to increase their dollar deposits at the BdL with interest rates of up to 12 per cent, in order to shore up the large stock of foreign reserves that were key to the currency’s stability. In turn, banks offered extremely high interest rates to their customers on multiyear deposits.

Lebanese banks shifted most of their foreign currency liquidity from correspondent banks abroad into deposits at the BdL. During the 1975-1990 civil war years, banks maintained around 90 per cent of their reserves in liquid assets, according to economist Toufic Gaspard. By 2019, they were down to 7 per cent.

At that point more than two-thirds of Lebanese bank deposits were invested with the state, according to Joan Chaker, an expert on Lebanon’s economic history, and the rates of return were abnormally high: annual payments on outstanding public debt constituted more than a third of total government expenditure annually. Politicians and economists later described it as a “state-sponsored Ponzi scheme”.

It all came crashing down in 2019 to devastating effect. After a decade of regional instability, there were no longer enough dollars to keep the system afloat. The pound plummeted to historic lows and banks imposed punishing haircuts on customers’ withdrawals, emboldened by an inert and hapless government. GDP has shrunk by 40 per cent and inflation is currently in the triple digits. 

Much of the public anger has focused on Salameh, with many Lebanese holding him personally accountable for wiping out their savings and allowing banks to lock them out.

“We have lost everything because of him,” says Mohammad Ali Hassan, a shopkeeper who angrily watched Salameh leave the BdL for the last time on July 31. “The only thing that would satisfy my anger is seeing him behind bars.” 

Paying the Forry men

Unlike most Lebanese, Salameh’s personal fortune appears to have grown throughout the crisis.

Earlier this year, Salameh told European investigators during questioning that in 1993 his cash holdings and real estate were worth $60mn, including $8mn in inherited family land. He said his fortune now stood at $200mn — meaning he would have more than tripled his actual wealth in 30 years.

Salameh has said his wealth was accrued in his years as an investment banker and subsequent wise investments. Yet a financial study commissioned by German investigators concluded in 2022 that Salameh “could not have amassed all of his wealth with the money that he legitimately possessed before assuming the post of governor”.

Sources close to the investigations told the FT that Salameh’s estimates of his wealth are conservative, given many assets are likely hidden away in tax havens or obscured by Lebanon’s banking secrecy. “We simply don’t know what we don’t know,” one says.

In 2020, Switzerland launched an investigation, followed in 2021 by Lebanon, France, Germany and Luxembourg. Authorities in Monaco, Liechtenstein, Belgium, the US and the UK are also probing Salameh’s activities.

At the heart of the Swiss investigation was a little-known company called Forry Associates. Incorporated in 2001 and registered in the British Virgin Islands, the company is owned entirely by Raja Salameh, the governor’s younger brother.

European investigators allege that this company was the main vehicle through which Salameh embezzled around $330mn from the BdL between 2002 and 2016, funnelling much of those funds into luxury real estate acquisitions across European capitals, Lebanon and in New York.

On April 6 2002, Forry signed a brokerage contract with the BdL, which allowed it to act as an intermediary between the BdL and commercial banks for the purchase or sale of financial instruments such as Eurobonds, Treasury bills and certificates of deposit.

Under this contract, signed by Riad Salameh and a company director named as Kevin Walter, Forry earned a broker’s fee of up to 0.38 per cent of the value of each transaction.

BdL employees interviewed by European investigators last year said they did not have any invoices or receipts involving Forry. Instead, Salameh told investigators he handled those transactions himself, and tasked a subordinate with executing the transfers to Forry’s account.

The commissions were paid directly from commercial banks into what Salameh called a clearing account, after which they were routed to Forry’s bank accounts in Switzerland. Salameh told investigators that the BdL employee who handled the transfers would send him a letter detailing each transaction to sign.

More than two years into their probe, investigators have yet to substantiate that Forry had any activities beyond receiving money from the central bank. They have not found a list of clients nor employees, nor a Kevin Walter.

In a 2022 search of Forry’s premises in Beirut — the same address registered as Raja Salameh’s former office — there were no employees, no fixed telephone line, and no letterhead with Forry’s name on it. Attempts by the FT to contact the company were unsuccessful. Raja Salameh did not respond to requests for comment, but has previously denied any wrongdoing.

All debit transactions were made to Raja Salameh and Riad Salameh or to offshore companies, French investigating judge Aude Buresi wrote, adding that the commissions “do not correspond to any real service performed by Forry . . . and benefited Riad Salameh and his relatives without the knowledge of his employer.” 

Several banks who had paid commissions to the BdL during the period in question, told investigators that they had never heard of Forry until its existence was revealed in the media and were unaware they had been paying commissions on transactions involving financial instruments to a company owned by Raja Salameh.

A mock wanted poster for governor Riad Salameh on a wall in Beirut
A mock wanted poster for governor Riad Salameh on a wall in Beirut © Marwan Tahtah/Getty Images

Riad Salameh told Lebanese investigators that no bank employees knew about Forry’s existence and Forry’s payments did not appear to have been subject to typical oversight or external audits, a Lebanese judge wrote in a summary note in February 2022.

The former central banker told investigators that the BdL’s central council tasked him with signing a contract with Forry in 2001, but ex-BdL central council members told investigators that was not the case. Internal BdL records and witnesses testimony suggest the contract was never shown to subsequent council members, who said they were not aware of it.

Riad Salameh has maintained that Forry had a legitimate contract with the BdL and told investigators he could not be drawn on any of the company’s actions, because he “had nothing to do with Forry”.

As part of his defence, Salameh hired a local audit firm to produce a report, which exonerated him. It found that no BdL funds were sent to the governor’s or Forry’s accounts. But the firm’s head recently told investigators it was not comprehensive, as Salameh only provided snippets to examine.

Forry hit trouble in 2015, when HSBC Switzerland detected irregularities on two transfers worth $7mn, according to an internal bank report seen by the FT. When HSBC demanded a copy of the original 2002 contract, Raja provided a version with marked discrepancies from the BdL original. The bank refused to process those transfers and shuttered the account.

French investigators have said those discrepancies mean the BdL’s Forry contract was “legally non-existent”.

Investigators have studied the money flows from Forry’s HSBC account in Switzerland to make their case against the Salamehs and their alleged accomplices, as it followed a complex layering process through multiple bank accounts in Europe, Asia and the US; as well as through offshore companies and trusts in Panama, the BVIs, the Cayman Islands, Belize, Liechtenstein and Luxembourg. 

In all, judicial documents show Forry’s account transferred more than $248mn to Raja Salameh’s personal accounts at HSBC Switzerland in multiple currencies between 2002 and 2016. From there, at least $207mn was traced back to several of his accounts at five Lebanese banks.

A man holds a banner with a piece of bread attached at a protest by the Lebanese Communist party in Beirut in March this year
A man holds a banner with a piece of bread attached at a protest by the Lebanese Communist party in Beirut in March this year © EPA-EFE

Much of that next went back overseas into companies, offshore accounts and investment vehicles of which Riad Salameh was the economic beneficiary — either directly from Forry’s accounts or via his brother Raja’s.

The funds ended up in bank accounts in Lebanon, France, Germany, Belgium, Cyprus, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, Singapore, the UK, Jersey and the US. “These operations made it possible to conceal the origin of the [embezzled] funds,” French investigating judge Buresi wrote.

Investigators say funds linked to Forry were used to buy properties in Paris and New York, and in the UK, Germany, Switzerland and Belgium.

Most of the Salameh-linked real estate and bank accounts in Europe were frozen in 2022 as part of the joint investigation led by France, Germany and Luxembourg. Eurojust announced the seizure of some €120mn of assets, including bank accounts and real estate. US authorities seized the two New York properties and associated bank accounts on August 10.

European investigators are also looking into multiple family members and close associates who they allege assisted Riad Salameh in his scheme to defraud the BdL.

French investigators have focused on Paris-based Anna Kosakova, Salameh’s Ukrainian ex-girlfriend with whom he had a daughter in 2005, as well as Marianne Hoayek, an assistant to Salameh at the BdL. French prosecutors have placed both women under “formal investigation” over criminal conspiracy and organised money laundering charges, with an added aggravated tax fraud charge for Kosakova.

Kosakova is accused of helping engineer a scheme to rent offices to the Lebanese central bank on one of Paris’s most expensive streets at well above market rate, with the nearly €5mn proceeds going into her and Salameh’s pockets. She also received more than $1.5mn directly from Forry’s accounts “without economic justification”, investigators say.

Kosakova’s lawyer told the FT “she contests all the facts for which she has been indicted by French authorities”.

Hoayek, who was hired by the BdL as an intern in 2005 and fast-tracked by Salameh to become head of its executive office, is accused of aiding and abetting money laundering and personally receiving at least €5mn in embezzled funds from Forry. The US Treasury said she has helped to launder “hundreds of millions” more.

The facade of an office block on the Champs-Elysées where property was rented to the Lebanese central bank at well above market rate © Magali Delporte/FT

At a hearing in Paris in June, Hoayek denied the charges against her. She did not respond to the FT’s request for comment.

France is also investigating AM Bank chief executive Marwan Kheireddine, who they allege helped Salameh and his brother conceal the origins of their funds. A search of his devices by French authorities gave prosecutors new leads, and revealed embarrassing details of Salameh’s payments to journalists, public figures, lawyers and his girlfriends. He is also under formal investigation in France, over criminal conspiracy and aggravated money laundering charges. 

In a statement, Kheireddine strongly denied that he or AM Bank “engaged in any illegality or wrongdoing” and said the payments in question were subject to compliance requirements and did not “contradict banking norms in effect in Lebanon.”

The tightening net

Since stepping down last month, many are asking whether the fugitive governor might face justice, after thirty years at the heart of power. 

It is widely assumed that Salameh will stay in Lebanon to avoid arrest and questions abroad. The arrangement suits Lebanon’s politicians fine, one senior politician says: “As long as he stays here, he won’t squeal [on their secrets] and everybody stays happy.” Banks are concerned about information leaking regarding funds squirrelled out of Lebanon during the crisis by wealthy depositors.

But impunity is rife in the tiny Mediterranean country, and Lebanon’s investigations have stalled amid complaints of pushback by Salameh’s powerful patrons and his refusal to co-operate. A judge was recently disbarred over her attempts to investigate Salameh and other senior Lebanese officials.

“From the very beginning, we understood that . . . justice would have to come from the outside to escape the omertà in Lebanon,” says Zena Wakim, an international lawyer whose foundation Accountability Now has filed complaints against Salameh and banks in Switzerland, France and the UK.

For Wakim and others, all hopes now lie with Europe. French anti-corruption NGO Sherpa, which is party to the case in France, has said they anticipate a trial to go ahead in 2024, whether Salameh shows up or not. 

France is investigating its own ex-central bank governor Christian Noyer over tens of thousands in consulting fees paid by the BdL. Noyer said he has responded to French authorities’ inquiries about the consulting fees in question and denied acting illegally.

Swiss financial regulator Finma has investigated 12 lenders for their ties to Salameh, as well Salameh’s transfer of $153mn in Treasury bonds, which the bank in question reported to the Swiss public prosecutor as raising red flags.

Salameh’s son Nady, a British citizen, has also been drawn into the investigation. German prosecutors allege that he funnelled “funds from Lebanon’s central bank” into real estate acquisitions, thereby concealing those funds “within the legal economic circuit of Germany,” a Munich judge wrote in a 2022 asset seizure order.

Asked for comment, Nady said that he has never been subject to any indictment under any jurisdiction, and said he has no knowledge that any public funds were used for acquisitions in Germany.

The forensic audit also gave investigators new leads, revealing another $111.3mn in “illegitimate commissions” paid by the BdL between 2015-2020, after the Forry scheme ended. A source close to the investigations suspects Forry is “just the tip of the iceberg”.

The US, UK and Canada on August 10 slapped sanctions on Salameh for engaging “in a variety of unlawful self-enrichment schemes with the help of close family members and associates”. The US also sanctioned Raja and Nady, Hoayek and Kosakova.

The international net may be drawing in, but at home the central banker has allegedly crafted his own protection. Having left the BdL “with secrets in tow”, the senior politician says, he has made known they are scattered on flash drives outside the country “should something bad happen to him”.



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