An armed man demanding deposits frozen by his bank took an unspecified number of hostages on Thursday at the Federal Bank of Lebanon, a security source said and a Reuters witness said.
Lebanese banks have limited withdrawals of hard currency for most depositors during the country's three-year financial meltdown, which has left more than three-quarters of the population poor.
The man entered the Federal Bank of Lebanon branch in the Hamra neighbourhood in west Beirut just before noon on Thursday with a firearm, the security source told Reuters.
Some customers in the bank managed to flee before he shut the doors on the rest, said the source, who was not able to specify how many clients or employees were in the branch.
Two shots were subsequently fired, according to Lebanese media station Al-Jadeed.
A Reuters witness could see a bearded man in a black shirt behind the gated entrance to the bank speaking to several men in plainclothes on the outside.
"Let them give me back my money!" he was heard telling them.


Trump dismisses Iran's reply to peace plan, oil jumps as Hormuz closure persists
UK's Starmer promises to be bolder to try to rescue his job
Evacuation of passengers from virus-hit cruise ship to be completed on Monday
Philippine lawmakers to vote on impeachment of presidential hopeful Duterte
Six people found dead in boxcar in Texas, police say
Turkish Airlines plane evacuated due to tyre fire after landing in Kathmandu
Thailand's former PM Thaksin Shinawatra released from prison
Iran sends its response to US proposal aimed at ending the war
