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Iran Minister Faces Impeachment Over Persisting Economic Crisis

Maryam Sinaiee
Maryam Sinaiee

Iran International

Dec 30, 2021, 08:12 GMT+0Updated: 17:47 GMT+1
Iran's economy minister Ehsan Khanduzi speaking in parliament.
Iran's economy minister Ehsan Khanduzi speaking in parliament.

Less than five months in power, President Ebrahim Raisi’s government already faces pressure by parliament to mitigate the deep economic crisis gripping Iran.

Jalal Mahmoudzadeh a lawmaker in the conservative-dominated parliament told Yekta Press Wednesday that lawmakers’ intention to impeach economy minister Ehsan Khanduzi was “now more serious.”

Parliamentarians have been discussing the move in recent days on the parliament floor and in various committees. Mahmoudzadeh cited appointments made by the minister, problems at the Tehran Stock Exchange (TSE), the falling value of the rial, and generally challenging economic circumstances.

While the current crisis is mainly the result of crippling sanctions imposed by the United States, conservatives in and out of parliament who supported Raisi’s bid for office were claiming a quick economic improvement by a government united under “revolutionary forces.” But since August there is little sign of economic improvement and the national currency has fallen more.

While impeachment can be launched with just ten parliamentary signatures on a motion, some lawmakers have claimed that 50 have put their names to impeaching Khanduzi. He would be the first member of the government of President Ebrahim Raisi (Raeesi) to be impeached.

Khandouzi has also apparently been at loggerheads with other members of Raisi's economic team including First vice-President Mohammad Mokhber and the head of Planning and Budget Organization, Masoud Mirkazemi.

Iranian media claim the influential duo have frozen out the minister, including from the recent decision to axe a special rate of 42,000 rials to the dollar for essential imports. Khanduzi appeared to be in the dark about the decision when it was announced.

Supporters of Raisi in parliament say the impeachment plan is designed to undermine the relationship between parliament and the administration. "Some people want the government to solve the country's problems in 100 days," noted Mohammad-Saleh Jokar, representative of Yazd, December 19.

Iranian media say parliamentarians’ biggest gripe with Khandouzi is the standing of TEDPIX, the benchmark stock index of the Tehran Stock Exchange (TSE), with stockholders fearing losses.

Before he was appointed economy minister in August, Khanduzi, had been vocal as deputy chairman of the parliament's economy committee in his criticism of President Hassan Rouhani's economic team and their policies affecting stocks.

"Before becoming minister, Mr Khandozi constantly tweeted and offered advice on resolving the [stock market] crisis,” lawmaker Mohammad-Hossein Asafari told parliament in early November. “He should now employ the same measures to resolve the problems of the stock exchange market.”

A survey conducted by the government-affiliated Iranian Students Polling Agency (ISPA) in July found that over 77 percent of Iranians who had invested in the TSE in the previous two years had seen their shares lose value, while eight percent had seen their shares rise and 15 percent had basically broken even.

ISPA reported that over 20 percent of Iranians invested in stocks when the national currency began losing value in 2018 when US ‘maximum pressure’ began.

In recent weeks Khanduzi has been criticized on social media by small investors whose assets have lost value. They accuse Raisi of neglecting their plight after promising to protect their assets when campaigning for the presidency.

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Banks In Iran Have Seized 1,800 Companies For Non-Payment Of Loans

Dec 29, 2021, 12:45 GMT+0

Iran’s deputy minister for industry and trade has said that bank seizures of companies and factories has increased this year, amid a deepening economic crisis.

Mehdi Niyazi told local media that from April to September 1,793 industrial and trading companies were seized by banks after they failed to make loan payments. Most banks in Iran are fully or partly state owned.

Niyazi added that over 60 percent of companies in Iran have financial problems because of high inflation, estimated to be close to 50 percent and lack of finance.

He explained that many companies after seizure of ownership by banks stopped operations, a situation that would increase an already high unemployment rate. One bank that just last year had 60 companies under its receivership now has ownership of 160 firms.

The deputy minister partly blamed high interest rates the banks charge for the insolvency of companies struggling amid sanctions and an economic crisis.

Iran’s weak economy took a turn for worse in 2018 when the United States withdrew from the 2015 nuclear agreement and imposed tough sanctions on the country.

Woman Reported Arrested In Iran After Trampling On Cleric’s Turban

Dec 28, 2021, 22:49 GMT+0
•
Maryam Sinaiee

A woman in the religious city of Qom was arrested for arguing with a cleric and trampling on his turban after he and another cleric warned her over her hijab.

Hawza News, news agency of Qom’s seminaries, claimed Tuesday that the woman had attacked the cleric around two months ago after he had criticized her hijab. Hawza News made no mention of legal action against the two clerics.

The arrest took place after New York-based activist Masih Alinejad tweeted Monday a video of the incident. Alinejad, who has a strong social media presence both in Iran and in the diaspora, is a critic of mandatory hijab in Iran.

In the video, which is undated, the woman attacks a middle-aged cleric, who holds a cane, knocking off his turban and trampling on it. The cleric is seen using his cane trying to hit the woman. She then chases another cleric across the street, before knocking off his turban too, as passers-by gather and watch.

In an interview with Iran International Tuesday, Toronto-based lawyer and activist Mehrangiz Kar said the clerics should have been arrested, and that one had committed a crime by “meddling with a citizen's rights” and hitting her on the head with his cane. The woman had only defended herself, Kar argued.

More than four decades after the Islamic Revolution of 1979, there is still much resistance to the prescribed standards of hijab promoted by the state, which many women refuse to accept even at the cost of being arrested, fined or even lashed.

In recent years, social media has been rife with tens of cases of fights with clerics over hijab and other matters. Some Iranians, including clerics such as Ayatollah Mostafa Mohaghegh-Damad, believe involvement of clerics in governance has damaged the sanctity surrounding them.

Seminaries, religious groups, and many government bodies including the education ministry work at "establishing the culture of modesty and hijab." Seminars, exhibitions, and state television all encourage adherence, and the state-run television airs many programs on the subject.

Qom hosts dozens of seminaries with over 100,000 students, meaning some clerics are alive to any slackening in standards.

Hardliners say adherence to hijab in Qom has hugely diminished in the past few years. "The mushrooming of loose hijab in the holy city of Qom cannot be denied," the news agency of the state broadcaster IRIB said in a report on the situation of hijab in Qom in August.

An activist introduced by her last name, Hosseini, told Fars news agency two years ago that she had organized over 450 'trained hijab patrols' to warn women over poor hijab in Qom. She said her colleagues handed out gifts such as veils, veil pins, and books about the lives of martyrs to women on the streets to encourage them.

Iran’s Labor Ministry Says It’s Not Their Job To Create Jobs

Dec 28, 2021, 16:46 GMT+0

Iran’s labor minister has described unemployment as the main problem of the country, second only to inflation, but said it is not the ministry’s task to create jobs.

Hojatollah Abdolmaleki made the remarks before the Iranian parliament on Tuesday, stressing that his ministry is only responsible for coordination among other ministries and departments are tasked with dealing with unemployment.

He noted that the current administration took over the government at a time when about 14 million people did not have decent jobs, while 2.5 million people were completely unemployed.

The minister, the youngest in the cabinet, added that according to plans about 1,850,000 jobs will be created in the country in the next 18 months, an average of over 100,000 jobs per month.

According to him, about 217,000 jobs have been created during the last three months. He did not explain how so many jobs can be created amid a serious economic crisis worsened by US sanctions.

There are numerous figures about Iran’s unemployment rate, ranging from the IMF which put it at about 11 percent to other sources who report it to be over 20 percent.

Part of the huge difference in numbers might be due to the government’s definition of employment. The Islamic Republic considers anyone who works for one hour a week, as employed, which means that the government greatly overestimated the number of truly employed people.

Retirees Hold Protests In Several Iranian Cities Amid High Inflation

Dec 28, 2021, 14:01 GMT+0

Iranian retirees held demonstrations in the capital Tehran and several other cities to protest their low pensions that have left them at the verge of poverty.

In the Tuesday rallies, the pensioners in Tehran gathered in outside the parliament while people in other cities held their protests at the provincial offices of the Civil Servants Pension Organization.

“Stand up and fight discrimination”, read some of the banners they carried during the rallies, while they were also chanting slogans against “incompetent authorities”, asking for their resignation.

The protesters demand higher pensions on par with the country’s inflation rate and rising costs of living. The annual inflation rate has hovered around 45 percent in recent months.

They called on the country’s authorities to accelerate efforts and approve laws that can potentially improve their pensions.

A bill to address the pensioners’ demands has been languishing in the parliament for months.

Iran, which is hit hard by economic sanctions, is the scene of frequent labor protests and strikes.

Hundreds of striking and protesting workers and labor activists have been arrested since 2017, many spending months in prison. Some are still detained without trial.

Concern Growing In Iran Over Plan To Eliminate Subsidy For Food Imports

Dec 28, 2021, 13:21 GMT+0
•
Maryam Sinaiee

Experts and media are warning Iran's government of serious consequnces if it stops allocating cheap dollars for essential imports in next year's budget.

President Ebrahim Raisi (Raeesi) recently submitted a budget bill to parliament that included eliminating the below-market exchange rate of 42,000 rial to the dollar for essential imports while increasing cash payments to citizens to compensate for any price rises.

Hamid Pourmohammadi, a senior economic policy official, told state television Monday that ending a special exchange rate for essential imports would increase inflation by just 7 percent.

Pourmohammadi, deputy head of the Planning and Budget Organization, told IRIB that higher prices for some daily purchases like bread would be compensated by increased government cash payments to citizens.But the amount of the additional payments mentioned by officials is only around $4 of cash handouts per month.

Inflation reports in recent month by the Statistical Center of Iran, a government organization has put the annual inflation rate at 45 percent.

Pourmohammadi argued that continuing to allocate dollars at a lower rate for essential imports would lead to a 28 percent jump in inflation, by forcing the government to print money to offset the fiscal losses caused by continuing high demand on foreign exchange.

The World Bank wrote last year that Covid-19 spending and “plummeting” oil revenue, due to the United States ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions that began in 2018, were taking Iran’s fiscal deficit to over 6 percent of GDP.

The subsidized rate − currently 42,000 rials to the dollar − has been in use since April 2018 - to hold down costs of imported food, medicine, and animal feed. The street rate stands at around 300,000.

There was only a single forex rate before 2018, when the government of President Hassan Rouhani introduced a subsidized rate of 42,000 after the rial fell to nearly 60,000 against the dollar in April 2018 as US president Donald Trump prepared to withdraw from the 2015 nuclear deal, the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action).

Critics say forex reform, although necessary, will push up the already high rate of inflation to a level above the tolerance of vast groups of Iranians and cause a major upheaval.

"People's patience with economic [hardships] is running out,” a commentary in the conservative Asr-e Iran website Tuesday said. “The Iranian people are under 'maximum pressure’ on their subsistence. The burden imposed on them over the years has gradually grown so heavy that increasing a feather on top will break their backs."

The commentary argued there should be no price increases: "Stop…weighing people down with new economic burdens. Otherwise, the number of people who have nothing to lose will increase next year and you are better than anyone aware of the catastrophic security consequences of such circumstances."

Hassan Sadeghi a labor activist said at a union meeting on Monday said, "In fact, the government wants to offset its budget deficit by increasing the forex rate [for importing essential commodities] to the level of the rate in the open market. The pressure of this move will fall on the lower income classes and workers.”