A woman held up a Beirut bank with a toy gun on Wednesday and walked out with thousands of dollars to pay for treatment for her ill sister, in a desperate heist cheered by many in crisis-hit Lebanon.
It was the latest in a series of heists in Lebanon, where the savings of depositors have been devalued and trapped in banks for almost three years amid a crippling economic crisis.
Sali Hafiz streamed a live video on Facebook of her raid on a Beirut branch of Blom Bank, in which she could be heard yelling at employees to release a sum of money while entrances to the bank were sealed.
"I am Sali Hafiz, I came today... to take the deposits of my sister who is dying in hospital," she said in the video.
"I did not come to kill anyone or to start a fire... I came to claim my rights."
In an interview with a Lebanese broadcaster after the raid, Hafiz said she managed to free about $13 000 of the $20 000 she said her family had deposited.
Cancer treatment for her sister costs $50 000, she said.
An AFP correspondent at the scene said petrol had been poured inside the bank during the heist, which lasted under an hour.
Hafiz told media outlets she had used her nephew's toy pistol for the hold-up.
Hafiz and suspected accomplices escaped through a smashed window at the back of the bank before security forces arrived, the AFP correspondent said.
AFP