Arab Times

Fear as Iran currency dives

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LONDON, Aug 1, (Agencies): Iranian lawmakers have given President Hassan Rouhani one month to appear before parliament to answer questions on his government’s handling of Iran’s economic struggles, state media reported on Wednesday.

It is the first time parliament has summoned Rouhani, who is under pressure from hardline rivals to change his cabinet following a deteriorat­ion in relations with the United States and Iran’s growing economic difficulti­es.

Lawmakers want to question Rouhani on topics including the rial’s decline, which has lost more than half its value since April, weak economic growth and rising unemployme­nt, according to semi-official ISNA news agency.

Rouhani, a pragmatist who reduced tensions with the West by striking a nuclear deal in 2015, is facing a growing backlash since U.S. President Donald Trump pulled out from the pact in May and said he will reimpose sanctions that seek to throttle Iran’s economy, including its lifeblood oil exports.

ISNA said lawmakers also want to Rouhani to explain why, more than two years after the landmark deal, Iranian banks still have only limited access to global financial services.

The nuclear accord curbed Iran’s nuclear programme in return for lifting most internatio­nal sanctions.

Rouhani’s summon coincides with further shows of public discontent. A number of protests have broken out in Iran since the beginning of the year over high prices, water shortage, power cuts, and alleged corruption in the Islamic Republic.

On Tuesday, hundreds of people rallied in cities across the country, including Isfahan, Karaj, Shiraz and Ahvaz, in protest against high inflation caused in part by the weak rial.

Parliament­ary speaker Ali Larijani was quoted by state television as saying that Rouhani will have one month to attend a parliament­ary session and address the issues.

Rouhani cancelled an interview on state television last week, a move that seems to have encouraged many lawmakers to question him about his economic records in the parliament.

Although 80 lawmakers submitted their questions for Rouhani, a Rouhani ally, vice president for parliament­ary affairs Hosseinali Amiri, called the process “unconstitu­tional.”

“Some lawmakers, who were convinced to take back their questions, were encouraged by other members of parliament to submit the questions again,” Amiri was quoted as saying by Tasnim news agency.

Trump said on Monday he would be willing to meet Rouhani without preconditi­ons to discuss how to improve relations, but senior Iranian officials and military commanders rejected the offer as worthless and “a dream”.

Addressing Washington, Hesamoddin Ashna, a Rouhani advisor, said in a tweet on Wednesday that “You launched an economic war against us by imposing sanctions. First stop this war and then ask for talks. Without preconditi­ons means without sanctions.”

Also:

MOSCOW/JERUSALEM: Iranian forces have withdrawn their heavy weapons in Syria to a distance of 85 km (53 miles) from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, TASS quoted a Russian envoy as saying on Wednesday, but Israel deemed the pullback inadequate.

Backed by Russia, Iran, and Lebanon’s Hezbollah Shi’ite militia, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has retaken territory in southern-western Syria from rebels, closing in on the Golan.

Moscow has sought to reassure Israel by saying it wants only Syrian forces to deploy on or near the Syrian-held Golan. Israel, however, insists that forces controlled by Iran, its arch-foe, exit Syria entirely now the civil war there is ending.

“The Iranians withdrew and the Shi’ite formations are not there,” TASS news agency quoted Alexander Lavrentiev, President Vladimir Putin’s special envoy to Syria, as saying.

Lavrentiev said Iranian service personnel whom he described as advisors could be among Syrian army forces who remain closer to the Israeli border.

“But there are no units of heavy equipment and weapons that could pose a threat to Israel at a distance of 85 km from the line of demarcatio­n”, Lavrentiev said.

 ?? KUNA photo ??
KUNA photo
 ?? (AFP) ?? This video image released on July 31, and provided courtesy of SITE Intelligen­ce Group shows Japanese national, Jumpei Yasuda, appealing for his release as two armed men stand behind him at an unknown location in Syria on July 25. A jihadist group has released videos of a Japanese journalist and an Italian man held captive in Syria, US-based monitors said on July 31. The two men – Japanese freelance journalist Jumpei Yasuda and Italian national Alessandro Sandrini – appear in two separate videos that are nonetheles­s similar in their staging and were released by the SITE group, which tracks white supremacis­t and jihadist organizati­ons.
(AFP) This video image released on July 31, and provided courtesy of SITE Intelligen­ce Group shows Japanese national, Jumpei Yasuda, appealing for his release as two armed men stand behind him at an unknown location in Syria on July 25. A jihadist group has released videos of a Japanese journalist and an Italian man held captive in Syria, US-based monitors said on July 31. The two men – Japanese freelance journalist Jumpei Yasuda and Italian national Alessandro Sandrini – appear in two separate videos that are nonetheles­s similar in their staging and were released by the SITE group, which tracks white supremacis­t and jihadist organizati­ons.

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