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Iran's Economy Minister Calls On People To 'Be Patient'

Dec 31, 2021, 11:58 GMT+0
People walking in a Tehran street on November 29, 2021
People walking in a Tehran street on November 29, 2021

Iran's economy minister has said Thursday that the government has no immediate solution for the hardship families face, urging people to be patient.

"We have no immediate solution for the problems of families except compensation through adjusting the amount of cash handouts but there are efforts underway the results of which can be felt in a few months’ time," Ehsan Khandouzi said at a meeting with economy professors.

The cash handouts referred to amount to $3-4 dollars a month, for each person.

Khandouzi referred to a decision by President Ebrahim Raisi’s government to eliminate a scheme that since 2018 provides cheap dollars to importers of food, medicine and animal feed as a way to keep prices low. In fact, providing dollars at a rate seven times lower than the market is a subsidy meant to help ordinary people against a high, double-digit inflation rate since 2018 when the United States imposed sanctions on Iran.

Currently the street rate for one US dollar is 300,000 rials, while the subsidized dollar for food imports is 42,000 rials.

Concerns have recently been growing over the consequences of the plan which experts say will hit the lower-income families very hard as the “reform” is expected to affect the prices of staples such as bread, rice, dairy products, and protein foods severalfold.

The elimination of the subsidy is not to be implemented before late March when the budget law for the next Iranian calendar year is put into effect, but media last week reported that food prices are already rising in anticipation of the move.

The media last week reported that the price of eggs has already been affected

as production of eggs is highly reliant on chicken feed, currently imported at the subsidized exchange rate. The price of a pack of thirty eggs that sold for around 400,000 rials last week has reportedly risen to around 600,000, while municipality-run markets have also increased their price by 40,000 rials.

In US dollars, 600,000 rials is around $2 and may sound cheap, but a typical worker in Iran earns around a $100-120 a month and cannot afford meat any longer, relying on eggs as a nutritious food.

"Experts and lawmakers' remarks about the possibility of elimination of the 42,000 rial rate led to some importers to withhold chicken feed from the market," Naser Nabipour, Chairman of Egg Producers Union, told Mehr news agency Thursday.

Hardliners who constantly criticized the Rouhani administration for "neglecting people's subsistence" can no longer deny the increasing pressure on lower-income families and growing poverty that is pushing middle-income families into poverty.

"The poverty line for a family of four is at a minimum of 120 million rials a month. This means that around 70 percent of Iranians now live under the relative line of poverty," economist Morad Rahdari told Shia News Association (Shafaqna) last week. Rahdari explained that relative poverty means not being able to afford anything other than minimum essentials such as food and housing.

Rahdari blamed unemployment for the growth of poverty. According to Rahdari the real number of unemployed is 20 million, not 3 million as government statistics claim because those who work even one hour per week are considered as employed.

He also said lack of investment, resulting from sanctions, more people to fall below the poverty line in the past 12 years. "There will be crisis after crisis, lack of development, more poverty and increasing corruption if the issue of sanctions is not resolved and the country falls behind in development more than this," he warned.

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Iran Vows To Launch More Space Rockets Amid Nuclear Talks

Dec 31, 2021, 09:49 GMT+0

Iran vowed on Friday to launch more rockets into space before March, one day after it claimed “research payloads” were sent into low orbit around the earth.

Mehdi Farahi, deputy defense minister said Iran will use an advanced version of its Simorgh rocket, which he said has more superior technology.

Iran's annoucement Thursday of the rocket launch coincided with negotiation in Vienna over its nuclear program and could be seen as an attempt to demonstrate military prowess.

Rockets for space launch are in essence ballistic missiles that Tehran relied on as a main weapon against regional targets. Some foreign observers and governments have argued that Iran's space program is a cover for testing of ballistic missiles.

The US State Department criticized Thursday’s announcement by Iran of the rocket launch. “The United States continues to use all its nonproliferation tools to prevent the further advancement of Iran's missile programs and urges other countries to take steps to address Iran's missile development activity,” the State Department spokesman said.

Western powers have said Iran’s testing of ballistic missiles contravenes United Nations Security Council resolution 2231, which in endorsing the 2015 nuclear agreement banned Iran from “any activity related to ballistic missiles designed to be capable of delivering nuclear weapons.”

Israel Signs Deal To Buy $3 Billion In US Helicopters, Refueling Tankers

Dec 31, 2021, 09:18 GMT+0

Israel has signed a deal with the United States to buy 12 Lockheed Martin CH-53K helicopters and two Boeing Co KC-46 refueling planes, the defense ministry said on Friday.

The deal amid heightened tensions with Iran is estimated to total at around $3.1 billion, according to the defense ministry.

Israel has repeatedly said in recent months that it will not hesitate to attack Iran if Tehran's nuclear program approaches a weapons' capability.

The deal, signed on Thursday, is part of an upgrade of Israel's air force capabilities and includes an option to buy six additional helicopters, a ministry statement said.

It said the first helicopters were due to arrive in Israel in 2026. Brigadier-General Shimon Tsentsiper, chief of materiel for the air force, told Israel's Army Radio on Thursday that the refueling planes on order would not be delivered before 2025.

He said Israel was trying to bring forward the delivery of the KC-46s, and eventually wanted a total of four of them.

Israeli media have speculated that the refueling planes could be crucial for carrying out a long-threatened air strike on Iran's nuclear facilities. Tsentsiper said the air force's current refueling capacities were sufficient for its missions.

With reporting by Reuters

Who Is The Mysterious Man Who Accompanies Iran's Negotiators?

Dec 31, 2021, 08:22 GMT+0
•
Iran International Newsroom

The presence of a man believed to be a United States citizen in Iran's nuclear negotiating team has led to controversy in Iranian media and on Twitter.

Social media users have criticized Mohammad Marandi, an advisor to the Iranian nuclear negotiations team in Vienna for making complacent comments about what may happen to Iran if the nuclear talks fail.

The Twitter account of reformist daily Sharq on December 28 quoted Marandi as having said: "What will happen if the UN resolutions against Iran are revived? We attach no value to the other side's ultimatums, because nothing is going to happen to us even if they pull out of the JCPOA and activate the trigger mechanism."

As part of the attacks on Marandi, Twitter users and some news websites in Iran said that Marandi is a US citizen so he should not be worried about the economic and other consequences of the JCPOA collapse.

Iranian investigative journalist and historian Hossein Dehbashi revealed on Twitter on December 25 that Marandi is a US citizen and questioned his presence in Iran’s diplomatic circle. Marandi in his response posted a picture on Twitter saying it shows him in Basij militia uniform when he was 16. He also said later that he was born in the United States, but he is not a US citizen or a green card holder. Dehbashi asked how come he can pay frequent visits to the United States.

Meanwhile, no one mentioned that if Marandi was born in the United States, then he is automatically a citizen.

According to Rouydad24 news website in Tehran, Mohammad Marandi was born in the US 1966. He is the son of Alireza Marandi who is Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's family doctor. When he first came to Iran after his father was appointed Health Minister, Mohammad was only 13.

Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei with Dr, Alireza Marandi, his personal physician, at the onset of the coronavirus epidemic in Iran 2020.
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Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei with Dr. Alireza Marandi, his personal physician, at the onset of the coronavirus epidemic in Iran, February 2020.

Mohammad Marandi has said that he did not speak Farsi when he came to Iran and he had a hard time at the Alavi High school, where most Iranian hardliners studied. This raises the question that his mother was not from Iran, but there is no public information about her. The headmaster of that school was Khamenei's Foreign Policy Chief Kamal Kharrazi who later became Iran's Foreign Minister under President Mohammad Khatami (1997-2005).

Mohammad Marandi also accompanied former Foreign Minister Javad Zarif's team during the nuclear negotiations from 2013 to 2015 although he was not part of the team. Zarif has officially praised him for his services as a liaison with Western media. In those years, Marandi appeared frequently on Iran's Press TV as well as on major US networks defending Tehran's hardliners.

According to Rouydad24 he also played a part in the negotiations by inviting some US public diplomacy players to Iran. Wat they did in Iran is not known. The hardline daily Kayhan at the time charged that Marandi's World Studies Center "secretly brought US public diplomacy officials to Iran." The daily called the center "an office similar to a branch of the Iranian Foreign Ministry."

Marandi was the dean of Tehran University's World Studies Center. Some call it the Faculty of World Studies. However, academics in Tehran say the center no longer exists. That could explain Marandi's official title as "Former head of the university's World Studies Center."

According to Rouydad24, Mohammad Marandi is a US citizen. The website has quoted him as saying that when living in an affluent neighborhood in Ohio he was subjected to racism as he was not considered "white."

Marandi has told US media that he is a big fan of the NFL and supported the Dallas Cowboys when he was in America.

Under President Ahmadinejad, Marandi used to explain the populist ultraconservative President's ideas on major US channels and often claimed that Ahmadinejad's controversial statements were not properly translated into English.

According to Rouydad24, during his TV appearances, Marandi proved to have access to confidential information in cases such as the seizure of foreign oil tankers by Iranian forces.

The website questioned Iranian officials’ double standard about dual nationals, and quoted Dehbashi as saying, "In the previous government being a dual national was considered a bad thing but now no one protests to a US citizen's placement in the nuclear negotiations team." Marandi has subsequently "blocked" Dehbashi and others who asked questions about his US citizenship and US passport, and only answered that he does not have a social security number in the United States.

According to Rouydad 24, Marandi repeatedly introduced himself as a US citizen in an interview with US Guernica Magazine in 2008. "As a child, I used to feel much more American than Iranian. Like everyone else at school, I pledged allegiance to the flag. However, after returning to Iran, sadly, I learned about a very different America, an America that most Americans have no idea exists. For the first couple of years this was hard to accept, and it was really painful in some ways."

Iran Plans To Make Billions More By Raising Gasoline Prices

Dec 30, 2021, 20:29 GMT+0
•
Dalga Khatinoglu

Iran plans to change the pricing system for subsidized gasoline it sells to citizens in a way, which will generate around $5.5 billion more revenue annually.

All carbon fuels are produced and distributed by the government in Iran with extremely low prices. The lowest price is 6 US cents per liter or 22.7 cents a gallon. Each car receives monthly 60 liters of gasoline at the lower price and beyond that, drivers must pay 12 cents a liter.

The new plan is to give subsidized gasoline not to each vehicle but to each citizen, reducing the volume to 15 liters per month. People who have cars and need more gasoline than their allotment have to pay 60 cents a liter ($2.27 per gallon), which is the gasoline bulk rate in the Persian Gulf region.

People who have no cars but receive their coupon for the 15 liters of 6-cent gas from the government can sell it to others on a mutually agreed price.

Now, let us see how the government will make a minimum of $5.5 billion profit by changing the gasoline pricing system.

Currently, 85 million liters of gasoline is consumed per day in Iran. Around 60 million liters is sold for the discounted price of 6 cents and the rest for 12 cents a liter. The government’s income from this is $7.8 million a day or $2.84 billion a year.

In the new system, each one of the 83 million citizens will receive half a liter of gasoline per day for 6 cents a liter, or about 41 million liters. The rest of the daily 85-million-liter consumption will be sold for 60 cents per liter, or ten times more than the discounted price. This will boost government revenue from gasoline 3.7 times to $29 million per day, or $8.32 billion annually. This means the minimum additional revenue will reach $5.5 billion a year.

Reforming the huge fuel subsidy system, which has been a drag on the economy might be a good idea, but amid an economic crisis it will contribute to inflation, as business and transportation costs will rise.

The fuel subsidy is not just for gasoline. Price for one liter of diesel will remain at one cent a liter or 4 cents a gallon, compared to almost $6 in Europe or $3.60 in the United States. The same huge difference applies to natural gas and electricity, bringing the total fuel subsidy to near $60 billion annually, or more than Iran’s oil exports if there were no sanctions.

The $5.5 billion-dollar additional profit is a minimum estimate. In fact, millions of Iranians have left the country and will never use the 6-cent gasoline and many others who are in the country who have no cars or access to internet will not be able to exchange their 15-liter monthly allotment for money. Therefore, the government will sell much more gasoline for 60 cents a liter, making up for some the oil revenues it has lost because of US sanctions.

Bahrain Appoints First Ambassador To Damascus In A Decade

Dec 30, 2021, 17:08 GMT+0

Bahrain became another Persian Gulf Arab state to appoint its first ambassador to Damascus on Thursday since it downgraded ties early in the conflict in Syria.

The appointment of Waheed Mubarak Sayyar, reported by Bahrain's state news agency BNA, is part of a diplomatic shift in the Middle East as a growing number of Arab countries revive ties with President Bashar al-Assad.

Gulf Arab states downgraded or shut missions in Damascus after the Syrian government used force against the 2011 protests that developed into war. Bahrain has said its embassy, and the Syrian diplomatic mission in Manama, have remained operational.

Last month, the United Arab Emirates, which re-opened its mission to Damascus in late 2018, sent its foreign minister to Damascus where he met Assad. It has called for Syria to be readmitted to the Arab League.

Abu Dhabi began to re-engage with Damascus after decisive gains by pro-government forces, hoping to increase Arab clout in Syria at the expense of non-Arab Turkey and Iran, which supports Assad.

The UAE was one of several regional states to back rebel groups in Syria, though its role was less prominent than those of Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which have not re-established ties with Damascus.

Oman last year became the first Gulf state to reinstate an ambassador to Syria.

Report by Reuters