Khaleej Times

Iran’s Guard may loosen grip on economy

- AP

tehran — Iran’s supreme leader has ordered the Revolution­ary Guard to loosen its hold on the economy, the country’s defence minister says, raising the possibilit­y that the paramilita­ry organisati­on might privatise some of its vast holdings.

The comments this weekend by Defence Minister Gen. Amir Hatami appear to be a trial balloon to test the reaction of the idea, long pushed by Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani. Protests over the country’s poor economy last month escalated into demonstrat­ions directly challengin­g the government.

But whether the Guard would agree remains unclear, as the organisati­on is estimated to hold around a third of the country’s entire economy.

Hatami, the first non-Guard-affiliated military officer to be made defence minister in nearly 25 years, made the comments in an interview published on Saturday by the state-run IRAN newspaper.

He said Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ordered both the country’s regular military and the Guard to get out of businesses not directly affiliated to their work.

“Our success depends on market conditions,” the newspaper quoted Hatami as saying. He did not name the companies that would be privatised. The Guard did not immediatel­y acknowledg­e the supreme leader’s orders in their own publicatio­ns, nor did Khamenei’s office.

The Guard formed out of Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution as a force meant to protect its political system. It operated parallel to the country’s regular armed forces, growing in prominence and power during the country’s war with Iraq in the 1980s. It runs Iran’s ballistic missile programme, as well its own intelligen­ce operations and expedition­ary force.

In the aftermath of the 1980s war, authoritie­s allowed the Guard to expand into private enterprise.

Today, it runs a massive constructi­on company called Khatam Al Anbia, with 135,000 employees handling civil developmen­t, the oil industry and defence issues. Guard firms build roads, man ports, run telecommun­ication networks and even conduct laser eye surgery.

The Washington-based Foundation for Defence of Democracie­s suggests the Guard controls “between 20 and 40 per cent of the economy” of Iran through significan­t influence in at least 229 companies. —

 ?? — AP file ?? According to an estimate, Revolution­ary Guard controls between 20 and 40% of economy.
— AP file According to an estimate, Revolution­ary Guard controls between 20 and 40% of economy.

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