Syrian gov't sacks central bank governor

SYRIA REFUGEES 4
The central market area of the city of Idlib, Syria, on March 23, 2021. Syria’s central bank chief was dismissed on Tuesday as the country deals with economic collapse. (Photo: NYTimes)
 The Syrian government on Tuesday dismissed central bank governor Hazem Karfoul whose three-year tenure coincided with a severe economic crisis.

“President Bashar al-Assad issues a decree terminating the appointment of Hazem Karfoul,” the presidency said in a statement.

It did not give a reason or appoint a replacement. 

Karfoul was named central bank governor in 2018, seven years into a conflict that has killed more than 388,000 people and displaced millions.

He oversaw an accelerating economic crisis sparked by civil war and compounded by sanctions, the coronavirus pandemic and a financial crunch in neighbouring Lebanon.

An analyst in Damascus, asking not to be named over security concerns, said Karfoul “did not live up to his role through implementing real interventions” that could salvage the local currency.

Karfoul, he said, had been incapable of “quick and decisive decisions” at a time when the government was looking for “energetic new faces” to oversee a rescue phase. 

The Syrian pound has lost more than 98 percent of its value against the dollar over the past decade.

Officially valued at 1,256 to the greenback, it sold for more than 3,000 on the black market on Tuesday, money exchangers told AFP.

Last month, it sold for 4,000 to the greenback, hitting an all-time low.

The government last month started enforcing a series of measures to stem a further drop in the pound’s value, according to pro-government newspaper Al-Watan. 

They include new import bans and a state crackdown on unofficial money exchangers, it said.اضافة اعلان