Lebanon's ex-premier refuses to appear before court

Fouad Siniora is accused of spending $11 billion without documentation during his premiership in 2006-2008

By Waseem Saifeddin

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AA) - The former Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora announced on Thursday his refusal to appear before the financial prosecutor on the case of spending $11 billion without documentation during his premiership in 2006-2008.

Prosecutor Ali Ibrahim, who is following the case, requested Siniora to testify on the case, according to the official Lebanese news agency.

Siniora told the London-based daily Asharq Al-Awsat he would not accept Ibrahim’s request.

At a news conference in March, the former prime minister said the money was "all spent based on the principle and the provisions of the Constitution and financial laws".

Yet, some adversaries to Siniora accused him of wasting donations and assistance to the Lebanese government without legal documentations during his tenure as prime minister.

The case comes in a very sensitive time where anti-government protests are held across Lebanon over the government plans to impose more taxes on WhatsApp and other messaging services.



* Ahmed Asmar contributed to this report from Ankara

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