The Sunday Telegraph

- COLIN FREEMAN Chief Foreign Correspond­ent, PAYAM FARAMARZI and MARYAM SINAIEE

A GOLDEN future beckons for Iranian merchants such as Mohammed Fathi — and they are very worried.

Faced with riyal banknote piles that grow bigger but more worthless every day amid the panic over the country’s nuclear crisis, they are turning to the one currency that has weathered every twist in Iran’s turbulent history: the sekkeh, or gold sovereigns first minted in ancient Persia in 500BC.

“The riyal is falling so fast that it’s impossible to do business in it,” Mr Fathi, 35, a stationery merchant, told The Sunday Telegraph last week.

“We can’t agree any proper deals with other firms because within an hour or two, the prices of everything may have changed. The government has limited the amount of other currencies we can use, so everyone is using gold instead.”

The switch to gold is partly due to the crude vote-buying policies of President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d, who has fuelled rampant inflation by handing out cash to millions of households to offset recent reductions in fuel subsidies.

But the underlying reason is his regime’s obsession with another, less stable metal: the uranium 235 that the West believes it is secretly enriching for a nuclear bomb.

Tomorrow, the price Tehran pays for continuing that programme will spike sharply, too, when European Union foreign ministers meet in Brussels to approve a ban on importing Iranian crude oil; a stiff blow to a regime whose vast energy wealth has long kept it afloat.

The new sanctions come just three weeks after US president Barack Obama signed a law that effectivel­y allows Washington to ban any country that buys Iranian oil from access to the US financial system.

The parallel US and EU measures, the toughest to date, follow the failure of almost a decade of negotiatio­ns, which most diplomats believe Tehran has simply used to buy extra time. Now, with the regime thought to be within a year of nuclear weapons capability, and mounting fears that Israel will attack before then, the West is gambling that economic pressure may ultimately succeed where political pressure has failed.

“This is a serious move to tighten the pressure on Iran and bring them back to the negotiatin­g table,” said one European diplomat. “It is designed to hit them where it hurts, significan­tly reducing their oil revenue.”

On the streets of Tehran, the smog-filled, mountain-ringed Iranian capital, the sense of impending crisis is already clear from the queues in the gold and moneychang­ing shops in the sprawling bazaars. Since October the riyal has tumbled from about 10,500 to the dollar to nearly 18,000 last week, sometimes sliding by as much as 500 riyals per day. The result has been a run on both dollars and gold.

The government has responded in typically authoritar­ian fashion, restrictin­g how many dollars an individual can buy, and sending plain-clothes police to arrest anyone dealing on what is now a booming black currency market but the measures have had little impact. At the few authorised foreign-exchange shops still selling dollars, demand is so great that other currency dealers have started hiring people to queue in line for them, according to residents of the Iranian capital talking through intermedia­ries to The Sunday Telegraph.

“I was paid 150,000 riyals (£5) to stand in line for a currency dealer,” said one labourer.

“There were 20 to 30 others like me in this line.”

The gold market has been the same: sovereigns, which were formerly bought mainly as wedding gifts, are fetching about 7,750,000 riyals (£274) for a quarter-ounce, twice what they cost in 2010. In three days alone last week, said Mr Fathi, their price rose 15 per cent.

Combined with inflation rates of at least 20 per cent, mass bankruptci­es have ensued. Half the firms on Tehran’s biggest industrial estate have gone bust, according to the Iranian Labour News Agency.

“My business has almost been totally ruined because transferri­ng money from Iran to foreign sellers has become very hard,” said Naser Alikhani, 42, who runs a print machinery firm. “I’m moving what remains of it abroad and laying off all 15 staff in my Tehran office.”

It’s horrifying to think of another war coming. Nobody can even plan for tomorrow

Iranian import firms also find it impossible to get outside lines of credit, and the costs of illegally imported luxuries, such as iphones, have risen by a third in recent weeks. Some shops are now finding it more profitable to stockpile goods rather than sell them, and Iranians are watching with alarm as their savings peter away.

“I have lost 40 per cent of my savings in the past three months and 40 per cent of the value of my home due to the falling riyal,” said Marjan Babaei, 48, an art dealer. “The government blames this on sanctions but I think most people feel it’s mainly to do with mismanagem­ent and corruption.”

The economic picture will darken further with the new sanctions on oil sales, which have earned Mr Ahmadineja­d’s government some £350billion in revenue over the last five years. Although the EU boycott will take up to a year to bite because of grace periods given to debt-laden Greece, Spain and Italy – Iran’s biggest EU oil customers – to find new suppliers, it could eventually rob Tehran of a fifth of its oil sales and perhaps a higher share of its oil income. Analysts point out that through the use of complex front companies, and simply lowering their prices, the Ira- nian regime will probably always find buyers for its oil. But by forcing it to sell at ever lower rates, Mr Ahmadineja­d’s income will be significan­tly dented.

Whether it will help bring about a change of Iran’s political direction is another matter.

Parliament­ary elections are due in March, but supporters of the reformist Green movement, who were jailed in their thousands after 2009’s disputed elections, are either banned from standing or unwilling to do so on principle, fearing a fraudulent contest again.

And despite the “Arab Spring” felling regimes elsewhere in the Middle East, Iranian faith in the power of street politics is at a low ebb. “The way the regime cracked down on the opposition leaves no hope of any change in the near future,” said Ali Rezai, 28, an engineer. Instead, the main threat to Mr Ahmadineja­d comes from factions within his own hard-line camp, in particular that of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the unelected “Supreme Leader”. Mr Ahmadineja­d has accused Mr Khamenei’s aides of deliberate­ly escalating confrontat­ion with the West, hoping that new sanctions will ruin the economy and discredit him.

The power struggle is less about ideology and more about the growing threat the clerical class sees from Mr Ahmadineja­d and his neo-conservati­ve camp.

Rather like the Protestant zealots of 17th-century Europe, the neoconserv­atives regard the clerical class as corrupt and overprivil­eged, and query its untrammell­ed power. Yet neither side is much interested in compromise with the West on the nuclear issue. Indeed, for many, another spell of the kind of battle and sacrifice experience­d during the brutal 1980-88 war with Iraq is just what is needed to keep the Islamic revolution pure and free of Western temptation.

By that yardstick, even a disintegra­ting currency and a bankruptri­dden economy are unlikely to change their minds; in turn, making it all the more likely that the Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu might back a pre-emptive Israeli strike.

“At the end of the day, Netanyahu doesn’t want to be remembered as the man who let Israel face the existentia­l threat,” said Mark Fitzpatric­k, an Iran expert at London’s Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies. He said it was far from certain, though, whether Israeli weapons, or even the much heavier “bunker-buster” bombs being developed by the US, could penetrate the most secure Iranian nuclear sites such as the new facility at Fordo, which is buried 240ft beneath a mountain.

A failed attempt would bring the worst of all scenarios: massive Iranian retaliatio­n across the Middle East, and justificat­ion for Tehran to continue the program as a defence against future aggression.

Right now, however, most ordinary Iranians are concentrat­ing on the battle for survival.

“I was only a child when the war with Iraq finally ended, but I remember those days very well, and it’s horrifying to think about another war coming,” said Mr Rezai. “But with the economy as it is, nobody can even plan for tomorrow, never mind the future.”

Iranians quoted in this article asked for pseudonyms to be used.

 ?? RAHEB HOMAVANDI/REUTERS/DBIMAGES/ALAMY ?? Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d, below, has steered Iran on to a collision course with the West and the people are suffering. The riyal has tumbled in value and Iranians are flocking to currency dealers, which are centred in Bazaar Arz in Tehran, above, to...
RAHEB HOMAVANDI/REUTERS/DBIMAGES/ALAMY Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d, below, has steered Iran on to a collision course with the West and the people are suffering. The riyal has tumbled in value and Iranians are flocking to currency dealers, which are centred in Bazaar Arz in Tehran, above, to...
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