"I'm here to support her to get her savings," says Mahmoud al Khattib, a retired soldier whose bank account is also frozen.Ismail Mohammed shows NPR bank statements indicating the family has close to $90,000 in their account.Khaled's daughter Amina Mohammed, 35, says she and her husband and their three children will be evicted by the end of December if they cannot pay their rent.Kamel Wazni of the Lebanese Control Commission, which supervises the country's banking sector, can't rule out that some of the depositors' money might be gone for good.Banks do allow withdrawals of $400 per account per month, plus some Lebanese currency, in a strategy that he says will repay as many as 70% of depositors."