Arab Times

Panic, anger after Tehran ups prices of food staples

-

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, May 14, (AP): Iran abruptly raised prices as much as 300% for a variety of staples such as cooking oil, chicken, eggs and milk on Thursday. Scores of alarmed Iranians waited in long lines to snatch up bundles of food and emptied supermarke­t shelves across the country in the hours before the price hike took effect.

Panicked shoppers raided stores and stuffed basic goods into large plastic bags, according to footage shared widely on social media. Lines in Tehran snaked out of grocery stores late Wednesday. On Thursday, Iran’s currency dropped to a low of 300,000 rial to the dollar.

Internet disruption­s were reported across Iran as the government braced for possible unrest, advocacy group NetBlocks.org said. Protests appeared to spring up in the remote and impoverish­ed south, according to videos shared online. The Associated Press could not verify their authentici­ty but the footage correspond­ed to reported events.

The scenes revealed not only deep anxiety gripping the country and frustratio­n with Iran’s leaders, but also underscore­d the staggering economic and political challenges facing them.

Food prices across the Middle East have surged due to global supply chain snarls and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which both export many essentials. Iran imports half of its cooking oil from Ukraine, where fighting has kept many farmers from the fields.

Although Iran produces roughly half of its own wheat, it imports much of the rest from Russia. The war has added to inflationa­ry pressures. Smuggling of Iran’s highly subsidized bread into neighborin­g Iraq and Afghanista­n has spiked as hunger spreads across the region.

Drought is already ravaging Iran’s economy. Western sanctions over Iran’s nuclear deal have caused additional difficulti­es. Inflation has soared to nearly 40%, the highest level since 1994. Youth unemployme­nt also remains high. Some 30% of Iranian households are below the poverty line, reports Iran’s Statistics Center.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi has promised to create jobs, lift sanctions and rescue the economy, but talks to revive Iran’s tattered nuclear deal with world powers remain deadlocked. Iranian families have seen their purchasing power rapidly diminish.

The government is trying to act swiftly to blunt the pain. Authoritie­s have promised to pay every Iranian citizen some $14 a month to compensate for the price hikes.

The cost of special and artisan breads, such as French baguette and sandwich bread, has multiplied by 10, bakery owners say. But authoritie­s are careful not to touch subsidies on the country’s flatbread, which contribute­s more to the

Iranians’ daily diet than anything else.

Subsidies, and bread subsidies in particular, remain a highly sensitive issue for Iran, which has been roiled by bread riots throughout its history. In the 1940s, bread shortages triggered mass street protests and a deadly crackdown that brought down then-Premier Ahmad Qavam.

Memories of Iran’s fuel price hike three years ago also remain fresh. Widespread protests - the most violent since the creation of the Islamic Republic in 1979 - rocked the country. Hundreds of demonstrat­ors were killed in the crackdown, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal.

But in recent weeks, the government has allowed prices to surge for almost every other staple, including pasta, until Thursday’s hike for remaining Iranian dinner table basics.

As Iranians vent about the rising prices of flour, the top trending hashtag on Twitter in recent weeks has been #macaroni - the term Iranians use for all types of pasta.

“I am sure the government does not care about average people,” Mina Tehrani, a mother of three told the AP as she browsed a supermarke­t in Tehran. She stared in shock at a price tag for pasta - now 165,000 rials for a pound, compared to 75,000 rials last month.

Iranians who had forgone meat or dairy to save money have nothing left to cut, complained Tehran resident Hassan Shahbazzad­eh.

“Now even macaroni is taken off their dining table,” he said.

“This jump in the price of flour has made people crazy,” said Saleh, a grocery store worker in Susangerd, a city in the oil-rich southweste­rn province of Khuzestan, home to an ethnic Arab population that has alleged discrimina­tion and includes a separatist movement.

Saleh said that the price of a sack of 40 kilograms of flour had soared to the equivalent of $18 from $2.5 in recent weeks, stoking intense anger in the restive province.

“Many rushed to groceries to buy macaroni and other things for their daily needs,” he said, giving only his first name for fear of reprisals. Tempers have also flared in Iran’s parliament.

“The waves of increasing in prices have made people breathless,” Kamal Hosseinpou­r, a lawmaker for the Kurdish area, thundered in a parliament session earlier this week. “Macaroni, bread and cooking oil are the main staples of Iran’s weaker people . ... Where are the officials and what are they doing?” Other lawmakers have directly rebuked hard-line President Raisi.

“The administra­tion is incapable in managing the country’s affairs,” said Jalil Rahimi Jahanabad, a lawmaker for the Taibad province near Iran’s border with Afghanista­n.

Supporters of the government have described the price hikes as “necessary economic surgery” - part of a parliament-approved reform package. Some social media users have ridiculed the term, saying officials have removed the patient’s heart instead of the tumor.

As outrage over rising inflation surges online, Iranian authoritie­s appear to be bracing for the worst.

 ?? ?? A customer looks at display cases in a bakery in Tehran, Iran, Wednesday, May 11, 2022. Iran abruptly raised prices as much as 300% for a variety of staples such as cooking oil, chicken, eggs and milk on Thursday. (AP)
A customer looks at display cases in a bakery in Tehran, Iran, Wednesday, May 11, 2022. Iran abruptly raised prices as much as 300% for a variety of staples such as cooking oil, chicken, eggs and milk on Thursday. (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait