US sanctions Lebanon money exchanger for alleged ties to Hezbollah

Jack daniel
2 min readJan 25, 2023

--

The US Treasury said, on Tuesday, it was placing sanctions on Lebanese money exchanger, Hassan Moukalled, and his business for alleged financial ties to blacklisted group Hezbollah, Reuters reports.

Its announcement said Moukalled was a financial adviser to Iranian-backed Hezbollah, which is also designated by the United States, and carried out financial transactions on its behalf that earned him hundreds of thousands of dollars.

“Today, the Treasury Department is taking action against a corrupt money exchanger, whose financial engineering actively supports and enables Hezbollah and its interests at the expense of the Lebanese people and economy,” Treasury Under-Secretary for Terrorism, Brian E. Nelson said.

A Treasury statement said Moukalled’s business, CTEX, was licensed by Lebanon’s Central Bank. Moukalled, Hezbollah’s media office or the Central Bank immediately responded to Reuters’ requests for comment.

It also sanctioned Moukalled’s two sons, saying they were involved in the same financial dealings.

Moukalled regularly appears on Lebanese television channels as a financial expert and has more than 50,000 followers on Twitter, making him one of the rare public-facing figures sanctioned by Washington for financial links to Hezbollah.

Founded in 1982 by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and classified by the United States and other Western countries as a “terrorist organization,” Hezbollah is a heavily-armed and politically powerful faction.

The Treasury regularly issues sanctions against alleged members of Hezbollah’s financial networks, most recently in December.

--

--

Jack daniel

Do not judge me before u know me, but just to inform u, you won’t like me