Daily Dispatch

Iran’s president comes under fire

Dissatisfi­ed lawmakers reject Rouhani answers on economic woes

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Iran’s parliament declared its dissatisfa­ction with President Hassan Rouhani on Tuesday, voting to reject his answers after grilling him over the deteriorat­ing economy. It was the first time Rouhani had been summoned by parliament in his five years in power, and MPs demanded answers on unemployme­nt, rising prices and the sharp depreciati­on of the rial, which has lost more than half of its value since April.

The lawmakers, who have already impeached his labour and economy ministers this month, were unimpresse­d. In votes at the end of the session, they expressed dissatisfa­ction with Rouhani’s responses to four of their five questions on the economy, which will now be referred to the judiciary for review. Rouhani trod a difficult line, seeking to acknowledg­e the problems facing ordinary Iranians without admitting to a full-blown crisis.

“It should not be said we are facing a crisis. There is no crisis. If we say there is, it will become a problem for society and then a threat,” he told parliament. As usual, Rouhani offered no concrete policy proposals, instead saying the answer lay in showing a united front.

“You may talk about employment, foreign currency, recession, smuggling... I think the problem is in people’s view of the future,” he said.

“The people are not afraid of the United States, they are afraid of our disagreeme­nts.”

But Rouhani’s government has been badly weakened by Washington’s decision in May to withdraw from a landmark 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and major powers and reimpose sanctions.

Most foreign firms have abandoned investment projects in Iran, and the next phase of renewed US sanctions in

November will hit the crucial oil sector.

Rouhani sought to shift the blame to the administra­tion of US President Donald Trump, saying: “We will not allow a bunch of anti-Iranians who have gathered in the White House to conspire against us.”

But most Iranians blame their own government for failing to capitalise on the nuclear deal while it had the chance, and for raising people’s expectatio­ns without delivering results.

“You created a palace of wishes called the JCPOA,” said Mojtaba Zolnour, an MP for the shrine city of Qom, using the technical name for the nuclear deal.

“With one kick from Trump, this palace was demolished, and you didn’t have an alternativ­e,” he said.

Despite the impeachmen­t of two of his ministers, Rouhani himself is protected by supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who said recently that removing the president would “play into the hands of the enemy”. —

We will not allow a bunch of anti-Iranians to conspire against us

 ?? Picture: AFP/ATTA KENARE ?? FEELING THE HEAT: President Hassan Rouhani speaks at the Iranian parliament in the capital Tehran, on Tuesday.
Picture: AFP/ATTA KENARE FEELING THE HEAT: President Hassan Rouhani speaks at the Iranian parliament in the capital Tehran, on Tuesday.

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