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Trading In Tehran Bazaars Comes To A Halt Amid Currency's Fall

Mardo Soghom
Mardo Soghom

Iran International

Feb 27, 2023, 16:12 GMT+0Updated: 17:33 GMT+1
People lining up outside a bank in Tehran to buy US dollars. February 20, 2023
People lining up outside a bank in Tehran to buy US dollars. February 20, 2023

Trading in Tehran markets has largely come to a halt as the currency rial is near its all-time low, Iran International has learned from merchants and traders.

A textile trader told Iran International that “For now we have stopped selling our goods because we have no guarantee we can refill our stocks.” He added that "a lot of merchants have lost money because their payables are in dollars while they have to sell their goods in rials.”

Local media reported that the Central Bank of Iran intervened in the currency market by injecting $700 million in UAE dirhams on Sunday and the rial marginally rose from its all-time low of 600,000 against the US dollar. But such a sizeable intervention has not produced the desired result of stabilizing the rial.

First, the currency rose to 560,000 but after a few hours it dropped again, trading at more than 580,000 to the USD on Monday evening.

Parliament continued a third day of meetings about the currency crisis but there is little the legislature can do, except asking questions from President Ebrahim Raisi’s government. On Saturday, the president’s top economic aide, Mohammad Mokhber told lawmakers, “This is what it is,” rudely dismissing their criticism.

The fact that the reported monetary intervention was conducted using UAE dirhams instead of US dollars might indicate a shortage of greenbacks in the central bank.

The same grim news about a halt in trading came from the goldsmiths market in Tehran, where the fast-fluctuating currency rates have forced retailers to hold on to their gold and jewelry.

A currency dealer told Iran International that curbside trading has become highly risky as plainclothes security agents are everywhere in areas where usually people buy and sell foreign currencies.

Trading has also decreased in the food wholesalers’ market where one trader said goods such as sugar, oil and rice that can be stored have been shipped to warehouses, not to be sold until there is clarity with the value of the rial.

Pundits urged the government to tell the people what plans it has to tackle the crisis, but officials seemed bewildered and confused. The speaker of parliament Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf (Qalibaf) was quick on Monday to claim that his fiefdom had predicted the currency crisis more than a month before and had warned the government. Others simply urged the government to “do something.”

Tehran’s Friday Prayer Imam, Kazem Sedighi, told the people to pray to fix the country’s problems. “We are in an economic war,” he said, just as the pioneers in Islam had to fight the unbelievers, this is also a holy war.

Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian was suddenly quoted as saying that during his visit to Iraq last week, he was told that the United States is open to resume nuclear negotiations. It was not clear why he had not disclosed the news three days earlier, except if suspicions that he tried to boost the rial was the real reason behind the belated revelation.

Some media outlets and commentators are speculating about changes in the government lineup, as many have been insisting for a long time that Raisi’s ministers are not up to the job.

One hardliner pundit, Mohammad Sadegh Koushki was quoted as saying that “If Mr. Raisi had the same information he has today prior to the presidential elections, he would have never become a candidate. Most presidential candidates [in Iran] have no idea about the magnitude of the job.”

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Feb 27, 2023, 12:28 GMT+0

Russia employed a new tactic in its use of Iranian drones to kill more people in Ukraine on Monday by planning a double-attack, killing two rescue workers.

After some media speculations that Russia might have used up its supply of Iranian Shahed-136 kamikaze drones, it sent swarms of the Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) into different parts of Ukraine.

As the week began early Monday morning, air-raid sirens sounded in most of the country, but in the western city of Khmelnytskiy two rescue workers who had responded to a drone explosion were killed when a second UAV hit the same location.

Iran has been supplying Shahed drones to Russia since mid-2022, and Moscow began using dozens of the UAVs in coordinated attacks together with long-range missiles in early October. So far, it is believed that hundreds of the Iranian drones have been used.

The total number of drones used in the Monday attacks is not clear, but the head of Kyiv’s military administration, Serhiy Popko said nine drones were shot down over the capital. Ukraine’s General Staff said its forces destroyed 11 out of 14 drones overnight.

The United States and its European allies have warned of closer military cooperation between Russia and Iran, demanding that Tehran should end its military involvement in Ukraine before there would be any chance of resuming talks over Iran’s nuclear program.

Iran first denied supplying Russia with weapons but later admitted that it had sent some drones before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began.

Regime Tightens House Arrest For Iranian Dissident Figure

Feb 27, 2023, 11:13 GMT+0

Sources close to Iranian opposition figure Mirhossein Mousavi say the regime has imposed more restrictions on him after he issued a statement in support of popular protests.

Kalameh website, close to Mousavi reported that his house arrest became more restricted following the publication of his recent statement in support of the “Women, Life, Freedom Movement”, and his call for a referendum to establish a new political system in Iran.

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Mousavi’s statement seemed to reject reform as a viable alternative, urging fundamental change, a new constitution, and a constitutional assembly.

Zahra Rahnavard also previously described the government's violence against women as "extreme cruelty" that has not been seen anywhere “even in the dictatorships of the Middle Ages.”

Afghan Opposition Condemns Handover Of Tehran Embassy To Taliban

Feb 27, 2023, 10:35 GMT+0

The National Resistance Front of Afghanistan has slammed Iran’s move in ceding the Afghan embassy in Tehran to the Taliban.

In a statement published by the spokesperson of National Resistance Front, Sibghatullah Ahmadi, the group said the action was taken despite the Front’s concerns about its “adverse consequences”.

“Nonetheless, [Iran] allowed the representatives of the illegitimate and the terrorist group of Taliban to enter the diplomatic mission of Afghanistan.”

It also warned that the political presence of the Taliban in Iran, with its “dark history” is “perilous”, especially for the millions of refugees who have sought protection in Iran.

“Handing over the diplomatic mission of Afghanistan in Iran to a group that is a murderer of the people of Afghanistan…is dubious and contains an unpleasant message to the people of Afghanistan and other countries.”

The statement expressed regret about the embassy takeover by a “criminal group”, adding that this situation will not last long.

Iran has good relations with the Taliban and also ties to the resistance front that comprises more non-Pashtun, Persian speaking Afghans.

Afghanistan’s embassy in Tehran was “formally” handed over to the Taliban on Sunday afternoon, according to an Afghan diplomat in Iran.

Sources say the Taliban has appointed Fazl Mohammad Haqqani, the first secretary of the former ambassador of Afghanistan in Iran, as the group’s charge d’affaires in Tehran.

Iran is the third country after Pakistan and Russia that handed the Afghan embassy to the Taliban.

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The Commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Hossein Salami says the IRGC is ready to expand its ties with the Iraqi military and train its armed forces.

General Salami said the Islamic Republic is ready to play an effective role in Iraq. He further noted that in addition to advisory assistance and exchange of experiences, the IRGC is ready to train Iraqi armed forces at different levels.

Salami made the comments during his Monday meeting with Iraq’s Defense Minister Thabet Mohammad Said Reda.

“We are after a strong Iraq while the Americans and Zionists are seeking to dominate the region and create insecurity in Iraq and Iran,” added Salami.

Iran’s IRGC created large militia forces in Iraq in mid-2010s to fight against the Islamic State group, but also uses them to maintain influence in Iraqi politics. Many Iraqis have protested against Tehran’s interference in their country.

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Government Tries To Bar Businessmen From Iran Chambers Of Commerce

Feb 27, 2023, 08:58 GMT+0
•
Maryam Sinaiee

Over 40 percent of candidates running for chambers of commerce in Iran who are somewhat independent of the government were disqualified by a supervisory body.

Disqualifications have been so widespread that the actual elections of chambers of commerce, industries, mines and agriculture often referred to as “private sector’s parliament”, had to be postponed from February 29 to March 10 to allow investigation of candidates’ complaints.

Mehdi Karbasian, a former deputy minister of industries, mines and trade, who represents several high-profile companies, and Masoud Khansari, the incumbent chairman of Tehran Chamber of Commerce, the most influential chamber in the country, are among the candidates who have been disqualified.

Khansari had recently disclosed more than $10 billion of capital outflow from Iran per year.

In a commentary entitled “Butchering Chamber of Commerce Election [Candidates] Following Increase of Businessmen’s Criticism of Raisi Government”, Aftab News website on Saturday said disqualified candidates believe due to profuse criticisms of the government policies by businessmen and chambers, the ministry of industries, mines and trade has decided to take control and only allow its own supporters to take the key positions.

Iran’s economic crisis has deepened in recent months as the national currency has lost more than half of its value and hyper-inflation is feared in the next few months. Prominent businessmen holding positions in chambers of commerce have urged the government to change its foreign policy and end US economic sanctions.

Head of Tehran Chamber of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture Masoud Khansari. Undated
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Head of Tehran Chamber of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture Masoud Khansari

The vetting was based on a recent regulation that required candidates to have at least two consecutive years of membership in chambers of commerce, to have paid insurance for a minimum of twenty employees during the past year, to have had a minimum annual turnover of 150 billion rials, and to have also been awarded for exports by the Trade Development Organization.

The boards in every city where the chamber of commerce elections were to be held consist of representatives of the Chamber of Commerce of Iran and the ministry of industries, mines and trade.

One of the barred candidates who did not want to be named, told Aftab News that that disqualifications were more a result of the candidates’ political leanings than the new regulations. “The ministry of industries, mines and trade and the government are trying hard to shift the control of the chambers, particularly the chambers of Iran and Tehran, to a certain political faction,” he said.

Aftab News which is believed to be close to former President Hassan Rouhani and the Moderation and Development Party, said most of the disqualified candidates have reformist affiliations.

The reformist Etemad newspaper wrote last week that those who are currently key members of the chambers were very unlikely to be allowed to run again. The newspaper predicted that the elections of the “private sector parliament” would be engineered to shift the control to government supporters.

The current chairman of the Iran Chamber of Commerce, Gholam-Hossein Shafei and some other high profile former members did not nominate themselves to run.

Chambers of commerce often produce economic reports that the government finds embarrassing while some prominent members such as Shafei have been vocal critics of the government’s lack of communication with representatives of the private sector over its economic policies.

Shafei recently strongly criticized the government’s proposed budget arguing that it would create serious challenges for the private sector.

Referring to the current foreign exchange rate crisis Saturday, a member of Tehran Chamber of Commerce, Ahmadreza Farshchian, described the past four years as the most difficult years for the private sector since the end of the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988).