Yemen's rival powers battle over banknotes
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[January 18, 2020]
SANAA/ADEN (Reuters) - Yemen's
warring sides opened a new front in their five-year conflict on Saturday
- a battle over old and new banknotes that threatens to create two
economies in the same state.
As of midnight, the Houthi movement which controls the capital Sanaa
outlawed the use and possession of crisp new Yemeni riyal bills issued
by its rivals in the internationally recognized government based in the
southern port town of Aden.
The Iran-allied Houthis, who say people should only use the old bills,
have defended the ban as a move against inflation and what they call
rampant money-printing by the government.
The government has branded the ban an act of economic vandalism. And the
population, as ever, have been left stuck in the crossfire.
Yemenis from both sides told Reuters the ban had effectively created two
currencies with diverging values, adding to the turmoil in a state
already governed by two powers and brought to its knees by the war.
In the one-month build up to the ban, people in Houthi-controlled areas
have been queuing to try to exchange their new riyal notes for old,
turning the grubby and torn bills into a prized and relatively scarce
commodity.
The riyal stood at about 560 to the dollar across Yemen before the ban
was announced in mid-December. The rate has since slipped a little in
Houthi-controlled areas to around 582, but slumped much further to 642
in the south, an area now awash with new bills.
That relative strength might look like a boon for northerners, if only
they could get hold of enough of the old notes in time to keep afloat in
the largely cash-based economy.
"We go for the exchange and they won't take [the new notes] from us. Or
say they need three, four or five days," craftsman Abdullah Saleh al-Dahmasi
told Reuters on a Sanaa street a week before the ban came into force.
"The new one isn't accepted and the old one is worn out, they have to
find a solution," the 27-year-old said.
A few days before the ban came in, around 20 angry men and women were
turned away from one exchange which said it had filled its quota for the
day. Many had been coming there for three days in the hope of swapping
their cash.
North-south trade has become far more expensive as traders have to buy
and sell two types of riyal - told apart by the state of the paper and
the different sizes and designs.
TWO CENTRAL BANKS
Many people in Sanaa told Reuters they felt the ban was needed to
constrain inflation. But they were facing difficulties in the
short-term.
"When people saw that new currency come into circulation, they held onto
it as it was new and shiny. But now it's a problem that they have it,"
said 28-year-old Abdallah Bashiri, a private sector worker in Sanaa.
In that city, legal exchanges will swap 100,000 Yemeni riyals (around
$172) in new notes for electronic currency that can be spent on things
like phone credit or electricity bills, for a small fee of around $1.50.
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An employee takes bundles of Yemeni Riyal at the Central Bank of
Yemen in Sanaa January 7, 2020. REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah
But things get more challenging when it comes to actual paper that
can be spent in food markets. Sanaa residents said unofficial
exchanges are offering to change 100,000 riyals of new notes into
90-96,000 riyals of the scarcer old.
After the Houthis stormed the capital Sanaa in 2014 and ousted the
government of President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi, Yemen's central bank
split into two branches - one in Sanaa, under Houthi control, and
one internationally recognized branch in Aden, which has access to
money printers.
The Aden authorities have defended their decision to step up the
printing of new money from 2017, saying it was an attempt to deal
with a building cash crunch and pay public sector salaries.
"The Houthis ... did not consider the economic cost to society,"
Yousef Saeed Ahmad, adviser to the governor of Aden's central bank,
told Reuters there this week.
"We hope the measures taken are short-term. They cannot be kept up
because the economy is one, it is interrelated and commodities flow
from Sanaa to Aden and vice versa. This measure will aggregate the
living conditions of all Yemenis," he said.
The crackdown on new banknotes means many public sector workers in
Houthi areas have stopped receiving salaries from the Aden
government. The resumption of these salary payments across conflict
lines had been a key bipartisan step to alleviate Yemen's
humanitarian crisis.
The Houthis have defended their ban as a way of defending the value
of the currency.
"The Sanaa central bank had to take measures to stem the dangerous
practices the Aden central bank was carrying out through their
monetary policy," said Sami al-Siyaghi, in charge of foreign banking
operations at the Sanaa central bank.
"The imposition of [Aden's] monetary stance on us led to the
collapse of the national currency against foreign currency ... With
each new issuance you notice a commensurate collapse in the riyal
against foreign currency," Siyashi told Reuters.
(Reporting by Reuters team in Yemen and Lisa Barrington in Dubai;
additional reporting by Maha El Dahan in Dubai; Writing by Lisa
Barrington; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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