Khaleej Times

TEHRAN BRACES FOR TOUGH CURBS

Move to add fuel to fire as protests over economy are spreading fast

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Iranians were bracing on Monday for the return of US sanctions against the backdrop of angry protests and a corruption crackdown that are roiling the embattled government of President Hassan Rouhani.

The country has seen days of sporadic protests and strikes in multiple towns and cities driven by concerns over water shortages, the economy and wider anger at the political system.

Journalist­s reported a heavy build-up of riot police on Sunday night, including at least one armoured personnel carrier, in the town of Karaj, just west of Tehran, that has been a focal point of unrest.

Internet was cut off in the area — part of a concerted efforts to block reporting on the unrest which include severe restrictio­ns for foreign

We deeply regret the reimpositi­on of sanctions by the US. We are determined to protect European economic operators engaged in legitimate business with Iran.

Federica Mogherini, EU diplomatic chief

journalist­s. The United States is set to reimpose sanctions on Tuesday following President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the 2015 nuclear deal in May.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo vowed on Sunday that the US would “enforce the sanctions” and that pressure on Tehran was meant to “push back against Iranian malign activity”.

The tensions have already fuelled a run on Iran’s currency, which has lost more than half its value since April, and exacerbate­d widespread concerns over high unemployme­nt, inflation and the lack

of reform. Rouhani is due to give a televised address to the nation at 21:40pm on Monday to outline plans for tackling the currency decline and impact of sanctions.

His government unveiled new foreign exchange policies late on Sunday, allowing unlimited, taxfree currency and gold imports, and reopening exchange bureaus after a disastrous attempt to fix the value of the rial in April led to widespread black-market corruption.

With senior religious authoritie­s calling for a crackdown on graft, the judiciary said Sunday it had arrested the vice-governor of the central bank in charge of foreign exchange, Ahmad Araghchi, along with a government clerk and four currency brokers.

Sanctions are due to return in two phases on August 7 and November 5 — with the first targeting Iran’s access to US banknotes and key industries.

The second phase — blocking Iran’s oil sales — is due to cause more damage, although several countries including China, India and Turkey have indicated they are not willing to entirely cut their Iranian energy purchases.

“This is just about Iranians’ dissatisfa­ction with their own government, and the President is pretty clear, we want the Iranian people to have a strong voice in who their leadership will be,” Pompeo said.

After months of fierce rhetoric, Trump surprised observers last week when he offered to meet with Rouhani without preconditi­ons.

That came only a few days after a bellicose exchange between the two presidents, with Rouhani warning of the “mother of all wars” and Trump responding with a Twitter tirade against Iran’s “DEMENTED WORDS OF VIOLENCE”.

Key Trump administra­tion figures, including national security advisor John Bolton, have called for regime change in the past, although the official line is that Washington only wants a change in its “behaviour”. “For Bolton and others, pressure is an end in and of itself,” Suzanne Maloney, deputy director of the foreign policy program at the Brookings Institutio­n, told AFP.

“If it leads to a wholesale capitulati­on fine, if it leads to regime change, even better.”

There have been ongoing rumours that Trump and Rouhani could meet in New York later this month, where they are both attending the UN General Assembly — though Rouhani reportedly rejected US overtures for a meeting at last year’s event.

Over the weekend Trump once again floated the idea of meeting, tweeting “I will meet, or not meet, it doesn’t matter — it is up to them!” “Iran, and its economy, is going very bad, and fast!” he added. Iran hawks believe the pressure is already showing results, pointing to a surprising lack of harassment by Iranian naval forces against American warships in the Gulf this year.

If Iran senses “American steel they back down, if they perceive American mush they push forward — and right now they perceive steel,” said Mark Dubowitz, chief executive of Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s, a Washington think tank that lobbied against the nuclear deal. —

 ?? AFP file ?? Iranian protesters and traders in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar hold a rally against the collapse of the rial as demonstrat­ors took to the streets over shortage of water and tough economic conditions. —
AFP file Iranian protesters and traders in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar hold a rally against the collapse of the rial as demonstrat­ors took to the streets over shortage of water and tough economic conditions. —
 ?? AFP ?? Two Iranian women talk on the street in a shopping district in central Tehran on Monday. —
AFP Two Iranian women talk on the street in a shopping district in central Tehran on Monday. —

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