Gulf News

“Rouhani government has no understand­ing of the extent of what’s going to happen”

TENSIONS WITH US HAVE HEIGHTENED FEARS AMONG IRANIANS THAT THINGS ARE ABOUT TO GET WORSE

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Less than a year ago, Amir was at a soiree at the Brazilian embassy in Tehran, exchanging business cards with shoemakers eager to sell to a market of 80 million Iranians.

The product of the evening’s schmoozing still lines the walls of his stores: Brazilian flip-flops and bath slippers. But now the footwear is subject to a government ban on imports as Iran tries to stifle the impact of President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the nuclear deal, which had opened the door for new suppliers.

“A lot of retailers have already closed down and I’m selling the stock that I have left,” said Amir, 27, standing behind the cash register in his small shop in a shopping arcade in an affluent area of northern Tehran. “Once I’ve sold everything, I’ll probably be unemployed,” he said, declining to be identified by his full name because of concern about speaking with foreign media.

Fiery exchanges between Trump and President Hassan Rouhani have heightened fears among Iranians that things are only about to get worse.

Since Trump pulled the US from the nuclear accord in May, Iran’s currency has hit record lows on the black market and foreign companies including Peugeot parent PSA Group and Total have been scaling back operations. What remains are the deep structural weaknesses in Iran’s economy that were compounded by embargoes, corruption and cronyism over the decades. Banks are crippled by bad loans because of years of poor regulation.

Sanctions that were lifted under the nuclear deal are now set to return within days, while Trump warned Rouhani not to threaten the US or suffer the consequenc­es. Record temperatur­es, meanwhile, have led to power outages in big cities and water shortages that have triggered protests. Iranians say they’re worried the government is overwhelme­d by the scale of events.

“Rouhani’s government has no real understand­ing of the extent of what’s going to happen and what will happen with these sanctions,” said Saeed Laylaz, a pro-reform economist who has advised the government. “The people have lost their trust and they are craving efficiency — they don’t care if it comes from men with beards or neckties.”

Strategy

Instead, the leadership is just trying to keep a grip on things, he said. “The strategy is firefighti­ng,” said Laylaz. “They’re dealing with crises as they happen.”

There’s little to suggest that Rouhani’s position is under any serious threat, but the rapid deteriorat­ion of people’s prospects would leave any leader vulnerable, let alone one where Islamic conservati­ves wield such power. The cleric is a little over a year into his second term and has been trying to forge unity with hardliners who always opposed the nuclear deal.

Many Iranians, though, blame US foreign policy as deliberate­ly destructiv­e and ridicule the Trump administra­tion’s stated aim of helping Iran in the longer term by bringing the country back to the negotiatin­g table. They see themselves as collateral damage in a geopolitic­al game of chicken.

“When you’re doing everything you can to destroy the economy, how is that supporting us?” said Parisa, 32, who runs a women’s fitness centre she opened with a friend in October last year. “I think the people feel trapped between Trump’s politics and the way leaders here are handling things.”

Frustratio­n with the government, especially among reformists who voted for Rouhani, is growing. There’s talk among some lawmakers of a new generation of Iranians being introduced to the wartime food coupons and rations that characteri­sed life during the conflict with Iraq in the 1980s.

Parisa, who voted for Rouhani, said she put plans on hold to expand her business because of the plunging currency. Most of the equipment she needs, such as weights and yoga mats, is imported, she said, also declining to be identified by her full name.

Different course

Ali Asghar Rezaei is another who wants Iran to chart a different course. Under the scalding Tehran heat, he steers his lumbering Iranian-produced Peugeot 406 through the city’s uptown traffic. Rezaei ran a garment factory for 35 years. He shut it a year ago and started working for a ride-hailing app.

“There’s no hope in general and it feels like we’re at the end of the line anyway,” said Rezaei, 58, who supported the 1979 overthrow of the shah. “I fought for the revolution and I probably still would, but something has to change.”

The government has tried to restore some order in the economy and show it’s in control.

Rouhani exposed some of the illegal practices among importers and rooted out a number of government-linked networks that had been controllin­g car imports for profit. Several officials at the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Mines were arrested last week. After the rial’s sharp decline as Iranians clamoured for hard currency — the euro is worth approximat­ely 100,000 rials in unregulate­d markets, according to Tasnim news agency, compared with about 40,000 rials last year — the government tried to halt panicbuyin­g. It imposed a fixed price on the dollar, limited currency sales to travellers and closed foreign-exchange outlets.

But the policy back-fired because some businesses exploited the difference between the central bank’s fixed rate and illegal black market rates while others floundered.

Sayed Ali Jafari returned to Iran in 2014 from the UAE a year after Rouhani’s election. The prospect of sanctions removal and a rapprochem­ent with the west threw up an opportunit­y to build an internet business and target foreign companies that wanted to advertise online in Iran, he said.

Four years later, Jafari and his business partner are now considerin­g applying for visas and leaving the country after their client base was decimated, particular­ly since Trump tore up the US’s part in the nuclear deal. They’ve lost the data centre that housed their server because they can’t pay the operator and are left trying to cater to a small group of domestic customers, Jafari said.

“Our targets for revenues and page impression­s and for gaining foreign clients have all fallen apart,” Jafari said.

Tight controls on dollar and euro supplies and the banning of purchases of non-essential commoditie­s from overseas mean that scores of suppliers and retailers are struggling to survive.

Shoe retailer Amir has helped run the family business, which has three stores in the Iranian capital, since he was a teenager. He said he can’t remember a time where things have felt more precarious and uncertain. a shipment of shoes was blocked by Iranian customs a month ago and is stuck there, he said. “The whole country is in a state of stress,” he said. “It’s like everything’s at a standstill.”

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Above: Residents stand outside a closed currency exchange in Tehran.
Bloomberg Above: Residents stand outside a closed currency exchange in Tehran.
 ?? AFP ?? Left: Women shop at Tehran’s ancient Grand Bazaar.
AFP Left: Women shop at Tehran’s ancient Grand Bazaar.

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