Business Standard

In blow to Rouhani, Iran’s economy minister impeached

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Iran’s parliament impeached Economy Minister Masoud Karbasian on Sunday in the latest blow to embattled President Hassan Rouhani as he struggles to face down a mounting economic crisis.

Karbasian is the second cabinet minister to be sacked this month, following the impeachmen­t of Labour Minister Ali Rabiei on August 8.

Critics say the government squandered the opportunit­ies presented by the 2015 nuclear deal and have failed to tackle high rates of inflation and joblessnes­s.

With the US abandoning the nuclear deal in May and reimposing sanctions, Rouhani's hopes of attracting vast sums of foreign investment appear dead in the water.

Major European firms, including France’s Total, Peugeot and Renault, and Germany’s Siemens and Daimler, have all announced their departure since the US announceme­nt.

Rouhani's conservati­ve opponents — who long opposed his outreach to the West and efforts to improve civil liberties — say the primary blame lies with government corruption and mismanagem­ent. “Inefficien­cy and lack of planning have nothing to do with sanctions,” said one lawmaker, Abbas Payizadeh, in a speech ahead of the vote.

“Wrong decisions have harmed the people and led to individual­s looting public assets,” he added. Rouhani, a political moderate, can still count on the support of a sizeable reformist bloc in parliament, but even some of its key figures have grown disillusio­ned.

“What have we done with this nation? We made them miserable and wretched,” said Elias Hazrati, of the reformist Hope faction in parliament.

“The middle class are moving towards poverty,” added Hazrati, who broke ranks to vote in favour of the impeachmen­t. Karbasian lost the vote of confidence, which was carried live on state radio, by 137 votes to 121, with two abstention­s.

The outcome sees him stripped of his post with immediate effect, leaving Rouhani to pick a replacemen­t.

Hazrati said the government had failed to plan for the real pain of sanctions, which will hit when a second phase of US measures is reintroduc­ed in November targeting Iran's crucial oil sector.

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