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Critics ‘Working For the Enemy’, Iran Leader Charges

Iran International Newsroom
Jun 21, 2022, 16:16 GMT+1Updated: 17:43 GMT+1
Iran's Khamenei speaking to tribal representatives on June 12, 2022
Iran's Khamenei speaking to tribal representatives on June 12, 2022

In a speech published Tuesday, Ali Khamenei warned politicians and the media to ease criticism of Iran's state officials as they grapple with multiple crises.

The remark showing Khamenei’s frustration with deteriorating economic and political conditions, was part of a speech he delivered to a group of tribesmen on June 12, but for whatever reason his office decided to publish it on Tuesday, June 21.

The statement could be interpreted as a warning to the media and Iranian politicians, coming amid fierce criticism of the Raisi administration for its inefficiency and inaction while the country has plunged into its deepest economic, social and political crises in its modern history.

In the Islamic Republic's jargon "enemy" is used to refer primarily to the United States and Israel, and sometimes to their aliies.

Although criticism of Raisi and his cabinet ministers started shortly after he took office in August 2021, partly for his choice of non-expert ministers, it has intensified in the past few weeks. Particularly on the anniversary of Raisi’s presidential win on June 18, even Iran’s strictly controlled media could not help but criticize his failure in every respect.

It was only the administration’s own daily newspaper which quoted Raisi as saying “All is well, and there is no problem in Iran that cannot be solved.”

In his speech Khamenei did not spare the state television either, which is under his direct supervision, accusing the huge conglomerate of working for the enemy. Khamenei particularly criticized the state television fir its coverage of Iran’s biggest bank robbery in early June, when thieves broke into a bank’s safe deposit boxes and the police and officials found out only four days later after a long holiday.

Some of the people present at Khamenei's speech gesturing in support of slogans. June 12, 2022
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Some of the people present at Khamenei's speech gesturing in support of slogans

Subsequently, state television chief Payman Jebelli apologized to Khamenei in a letter addressed to him and promised to make up for the error.

Khamenei went on to say that “The enemy of the Iranian nation, of Islam, of the country and of the Islamic Republic is relying on soft war today.”

He claimed: “Today, the enemy is trying to undermine religious faith, hope and optimism about the future and the management of the country. They think about finding ways to make the people believe that they have no future, that the future is at a dead end, and that they are stuck in an impasse. They are making plans for this. On the internet and sometimes in our own official media, they promote these ideas…that all paths are wrong, and officials and managers do not know how to run the country.”

Khamenei insisting that state entities are accomplishing a lot, added: “Anyone who undermines the people’s hope in the future is working for the enemy, whether they do this knowingly or unknowingly. Anyone who undermines the people’s faith is working to the advantage of the enemy... Anyone who causes the people to lose faith…in officials and brings pessimism is working for the enemy...”

Khamenei simply ignored that daily protests take place across the country by teachers, workers, nurses, and retirees who simply demand their delayed salaries and pensions.

Even Khamenei’s loyalist hardliners in parliament harshly criticize Raisi and his government for their inaction and inefficiency. However, they do not mention that Khamenei is the one who engineered the low-turnout election that brought Raisi to power.

The 82-year-old Supreme Leader repeated his most favored theory that “America, England, France, reactionary regimes and everyone who followed them…wanted to tear Iran into pieces,” and charged that “they wanted to reinstate America’s domination over the country.”

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Iran’s Nurses’ Society Irked By President’s Ungrateful Remarks

Jun 21, 2022, 11:28 GMT+1

Iranian nurses are outraged over recent remarks by President Ebrahim Raisi who said that during the Covid-19 pandemic, Basijis and Islamic scholars taught doctors and nurses how to serve the people.

The head of the Iranian Nursing Organization, Mohammad Mirzabeigi, wrote a letter to the president on Monday to express anger and disappointment about remarks by the head of Gilan Medical Sciences University, whom Raisi cited as the source of his contentious comment. 

In the letter, Mirzabeigi said that the nursing community, along with other medical staff, is at the forefront of serving the people and patients and sacrificed a lot during the Covid-19 outbreak. 

Describing nurses, physicians and paramedical personnel as the most committed forces in the country, he also called on the president to express gratitude for the efforts of the community and console the nurses and their families, many of whom have lost their loved ones on the line of duty during the pandemic. 

In addition to Mirzabeigi, social media users also reacted to Raisi’s remarks, strongly criticizing the mass layoff of nurses after the height of the Covid health crisis was over.

Moreover, reports say that with the pandemic easing about 5,000 nurses who were working under temporary contracts have been fired.

IRGC Chief Praises Tehran Sarallah HQ For Maintaining Security

Jun 20, 2022, 17:35 GMT+1

The commander of Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) has praised the role of Sarallah (Sar-Allah) Headquarters in Tehran in Iran’s security, saying it plays a major role in defeating plots by “the enemy”. 

Hossein Salami made the remarks on Monday in a ceremony to mark the anniversary of the order to establish Sarallah HQ, which is officially under the direct command of the IRGC's commander in chief, but he delegates his authority to a deputy commander.

The enemies have realized that the decline in their power originates from this place, and therefore Tehran is where all the enmities and conspiracies against the country converge and thwarted, he said.

Tehran is a city with global influences, whose insightful residents have overcome hardships with the power of faith and tolerance, Salami added.

Considered the most important IRGC ground force, Sarallah is tasked with keeping the capital secure and protecting key institutions and the offices of the government. Its undeclared mission is suppressing dissent and protests as they did heavy-handedly during the popular protests in the past few years. 

Salami’s remarks come while the former de facto commander of the Sarallah HQ, Mohammad Esmail Kosari, who now represents Tehran at the parliament, is pushing to ease the use of firearms by different security forces against civilians amid recurring protests.

"In every country and human society, the security of the security forces and the police is a priority, followed by the security of the society. They have a duty to establish security in society, therefore they need to use firearms to maintain that security," Kosari said on Monday.

Leading Iranian Surgeon Speaks Out Against Chopping Off Fingers

Jun 20, 2022, 12:09 GMT+1

Iraj Fazel, head of the Iranian association of surgeons, has called on the judiciary not to sanction the amputation of fingers to punish thieves.

In a letter to the chief justice Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei released to the media Sunday, Fazel called the practice "worrying and horrifying" and said it would create “a wave of hatred and disgust in the world.”

Earlier in June, four fingers of a prisoner were cut off in Tehran’s Evin prison with a guillotine reportedly installed at the infirmary a month earlier to carry out such sentences. According to some readings of Islamic law, just punishment for theft can be amputation of fingers or hands.

Eight men convicted of theft are at imminent risk of having their fingers cut off, according to the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center for Human Rights in Iran (ABC) and Amnesty International.

Three of them, who have waited five years for their sentence to be implemented, have been transferred from Orumiyeh prison in the north-western province of West Azarbaijan to Tehran for the amputation to take place.

"The international community can and should react urgently to stop the implementation of these amputations," Roya Boroumand, ABC executive director, said earlier in June. Amnesty condemned the move to “deliberately mutilate and traumatize prisoners through unspeakably cruel judicial corporal punishments.”

An informed source from the judiciary reacted to the letter, denying reports about the imminent amputations.

Tehran’s Transportation Fleet Workers Join Nationwide Protests, Strikes

Jun 19, 2022, 20:38 GMT+1

As strikes and protests continued in Iran’s retail and industrial sectorss on Sunday, a group of workers of Tehran’s transportation fleet held a protest rally for their demands. 

The drivers and truckers gathered in front of the Roads and Transportation Organization in Tehran to protest the economic hardship they are going through.

Videos on social media showed them chanting slogans against the empty promises by the government and the crackdown by the security forces. 

In May, the Union of Truckers and Drivers' Organization announced plans to hold a nationwide strike, saying holding protests for the realization of their demands are their inalienable right. The date of the strike is to be announced soon.

Sunday’s protest took place against the backdrop of shop owners’ strikes and pensioners' protests in many cities across the country, such as Kermanshah, Sari, Rasht, and several cities in the oil-rich Khuzestan province, including Ahvaz, Shush, and Shushtar. 

The protests and strikes by pensioners and retailers on Saturday coincided with President Ebrahim Raisi’s first election anniversary amid economic and political uncertainty.

Retirees took to the streets in many cities and towns on Sunday again to protest the meager rise in their pensions, which fails to compensate for the huge drop in their purchasing power given an inflation rate of over 40 percent. The current round of strikes and demonstrations began on Sunday, June 12, after Iran’s currency fell to a historic low of 333,000 rials to the US dollar. 

A Year After Election, Papers Say Iran's Raisi Let Down The Nation

Jun 19, 2022, 16:53 GMT+1
•
Iran International Newsroom

Iranian newspapers Sunday marked the end of the first year since President Ebrahim Raisi's election on June 18, 2021 with harsh criticism of his economic team.

Most columnists and commentators welcomed the recent resignation of Raisi's Labor Minister Hojjat Abdolmaleki but said that many more ministers will have to leave the cabinet.

Nonetheless, some commentators including Reformist lawmaker Naser Ghavami said replacing current ministers with new ones cannot solve Iran's economic problems. He added that even the best economists cannot tackle the ongoing economic crisis because the underlying reason for problems is the political system itself.

Ghavami charged that the government has made Iran dependant on Russia and China, adding that the two countries simply follow their own interests.

Former lawmaker Mohammad Reza Khabbaz asked: "Do not these minister feel any shame even before their own conscience for accepting to be in charge of key ministries? On what basis has Raisi appointed them as ministers? And what do those who suggested these individuals think about the situation now?"

Khabbaz said that many more ministers from Raisi's cabinet need to go. Meanwhile, he called those ministers who promised to create one million jobs or build one million houses every year, "liars." He further asked: "Isn't what they have been doing a waste of the country's resources and the nation's dignity?"

Protests in Tehran Bazaar against a steep rise in prices. June 11, 2022
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Protests in Tehran Bazaar against a steep rise in prices. June 11, 2022

Columnist Mohammad Shadi wrote in a commentary in Jahan Sanat newspaper that his publication has been in the market for nearly two decades and it was evident for its journalists that Raisi's ministers were not fit for their jobs. Shadi opined that at least two more economic ministers should leave the government.

Shadi wrote that Iran needs to prove that its economic policies are consistent with international norms if it wishes to attract foreign investment.

The new reformist daily Arman Emrooz, not to be mistaken with the very similar looking Arman Melli, wrote that "during the past ten months since Raisi took office, he has issued a major directive every 9 days. However, 3 out of every 4 orders have been ignored by those who had to carry them out."

The daily added: "Out of 37 official orders issued by Raisi, 27 of them have not been carried out at all, 6 have been carried out and another 4 have been abandoned halfway through their implementation."

Meanwhile, Tahmoures Hoseini wrote in an article in Toseh Irani newspaper: "Because of the government's performance, the divide between the people and officials has increasingly widened in recent years. The current government blames its predecessors and the members of the previous government blame the way elections are held in Iran.

The daily wrote that the rise in the number of protests is another indication of the government's failure while it keeps blaming the United States. The daily quoted Former lawmaker Gholamreza Jafarzadeh Imanabadi: "I should say clearly that I doubt the honesty of Raisi's economic team. Raisi needs to reshuffle his government and try to meet the promises he made to the people for their votes."

Economist Albert Boghossian wrote in Setareh Sobh that most of the complaints about the government have something to do with Raisi's broken promises. ‌Boghossian also added that neither Raisi nor his economic team can make any difference while the system does not allow for reforms.

Despite all this, the administration-owned daily, Iran, says all is well, and quotes Raisi as saying, "There is no problem in Iran that cannot be solved."