BEIRUT — Lebanon's moves to remove weapons from all non-state groups and assert full state control are as important as financial reforms if the economy is to recover after years of crisis, the economy minister said Thursday.
''You need economic reforms, but you also need security and political reforms,'' Amer Bisat told The Associated Press after a cabinet session in which the Lebanese military reported progress on a plan to disarm Hezbollah and non-state groups and expand deployment in southern Lebanon.
''We're moving, and we're moving fairly decisively and clearly in that direction,'' he said, adding that asserting full sovereignty to boost investor confidence goes beyond disarmament and military deployment in the south.
''(It) is also the control of the borders, control of the airport, control over smuggling, money-laundering, terrorist activities,'' said Bisat.
Lebanon's military said Thursday it has completed the first phase of the plan, though Israel maintains that Hezbollah is still present and rearming in areas the army said it now fully controls.
Israel and Hezbollah's monthslong war in 2024 battered large swaths of the country and set it back the further economically after years of crisis. The World Bank estimates $11 billion in damages and economic losses from the conflict. The country fell into a protracted financial crisis in 2019 after decades of corruption and mismanagement.
Bisat is a member of Prime Minister Nawaf Salam's reformist government which was appointed last year with a mandate to reform the country's banks and make the country's crippled economy viable again.
For years, the government has stalled on making wide-reaching reforms that could implicate the country's wide network of cronies. However, western countries and wealthy Gulf Arab monarchies that once poured large sums of money into the country, say that investment and substantial help won't come without economic and security reforms.