Imperial Valley Press

Iranians say US sanctions blocking access to needed medicine

- Boy suffering from liver cancer, plays at Mahak

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Taha Shakouri keeps finding remote corners to play in at a Tehran children’s charity hospital, unaware that his doctors are running out of chemo medicine needed to treat the eight-year-old boy’s liver cancer.

With Iran’s economy in free fall after the U.S. pullout from the nuclear deal and escalated sanctions on Tehran, prices of imported medicines have soared as the national currency tumbled about 70% against the dollar. Even medicines manufactur­ed in Iran are tougher to come by for ordinary Iranians, their cost out of reach for many in a country where the average monthly salary is equivalent to about $450.

Iran’s health system can’t keep up and many are blaming President Donald Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign for the staggering prices and shortages. The sanctions have hurt ordinary Iranians, sending prices for everything from staples and consumer goods to housing skyward, while raising the specter of war with the U.S.

Taha’s mother, Laya Taghizadeh, says the hospital provides her son’s medication for free — a single treatment would otherwise cost $1,380 at a private hospital. She adds the family is deeply grateful to the doctors and the hospital sta .

“We couldn’t make it without their support,” says the 30-yearold woman. “My husband is a simple grocery store worker and this is a very costly disease.”

The Iranian rial has plunged from 32,000 to $1 at the time of the 2015 nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers to around 120,000 rials to the dollar these days, highly affecting prices of imported medicines. The nuclear deal had raised expectatio­ns of a better life for many Iranians, free of the chokehold of internatio­nal sanctions.

The landmark accord lifted internatio­nal sanctions in exchange for curbs on Iran’s nuclear program, but now the deal has all but unraveled and new and tougher U.S. sanctions are in place.

While the United States insists that medicines and humanitari­an goods are exempt from sanctions, restrictio­ns on trade have made many banks and companies across the world hesitant to do business with Iran, fearing punitive measures from Washington. The country is cut o from the internatio­nal banking system.

Last week, Health Minister Saeed Namaki said budget cuts because of the drop in crude exports have dramatical­ly a ected his department. The U.S. sanctions have targeted all classes of Iranians, he added.

“The American claims that medicine and medical equipment are not subject to sanctions is a big and obvious lie,” Namaki said.

“Our biggest concern is that channels to the outside world are closed,” said Dr. Arasb Ahmadian, head of the Mahak Children’s Hospital, which is run through charity donations and supports some 32,000 under-16 children across Iran.

The banking sanctions have blocked transactio­ns, preventing donations from abroad, he said. Transfers of money simply fail, including those approved by the U.S. Treasury.

“Indeed, we are losing hope,” said Ahmadian. “Medicines should be purchasabl­e, funding should be available and lines of credit should be clearly defined in the banking system.”

O cial reports say Iran produces some 95% of the basic medicines it needs and even exports some of the production to neighborin­g countries.

But when it comes to more sophistica­ted medication and medicines for costly and rare illnesses and medical equipment, Iran depends heavily on imports. And though the state provides health care for all, many treatments needed for complicate­d cases are simply not available. Many prefer to go to private hospitals if they can and avoid long waiting lists at state ones.

Long lines form every morning in the 13-Aban Pharmacy in central Karimikhan Street, where people come looking for rare medicines for sick family members.

 ?? PHOTO/EBRAHIM NOROOZI ?? In this June 19 photo, Taha Shakouri, an 8-year-old Center’s, Hospital in Tehran, Iran. AP
PHOTO/EBRAHIM NOROOZI In this June 19 photo, Taha Shakouri, an 8-year-old Center’s, Hospital in Tehran, Iran. AP

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