Los Angeles Times

As nuclear talks stall, Iranian unrest grows

Farmers, teachers and others suffer while the economy continues to tank, setting off protests and strikes.

- By Omid Khazani Khazani is a special correspond­ent. Times staff writer Henry Chu in London contribute­d to this report.

TEHRAN — A tide of social unrest is washing over Iran as the country’s economy — devastated by years of harsh U.S.-led sanctions — continues to tank. Farmers, factory workers, teachers, bus drivers and others have demonstrat­ed or gone on strike to protest their deteriorat­ing living conditions, braving the heavy hand of authoritie­s who brook no dissent.

At the same time, negotiatio­ns in Vienna have stalled between Tehran and world powers over reviving the nuclear accord that collapsed in 2018 when the U.S. withdrew from the agreement. Known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, the deal limited Iran’s nuclear program while granting the country billions of dollars’ worth of sanctions relief.

Statements by negotiator­s have veered wildly between optimism that a breakthrou­gh is imminent and deep skepticism that an agreement can be reached. Although President Biden has urged the deal’s revival, the administra­tion’s special envoy for Iran said last week that its prospects were “tenuous” at best, in part because the war in Ukraine has hardened Russia’s position.

Here’s a look at how the recent wave of protests and strikes in Iran and the talks over the nuclear deal are intertwine­d for the country’s theocratic government.

How are the unrest and the nuclear deal related?

After the collapse of the accord four years ago, the U.S. under then-President Trump switched to a “maximum pressure” campaign that has further strangled the Iranian economy, while Tehran has pressed ahead with enriching its stockpile of uranium to levels that approach weapons grade.

In 2019, the deadliest riots since the Islamic Revolution of the 1970s broke out amid popular anger over skyrocketi­ng prices of fuel and other goods. A brutal government crackdown resulted in the deaths of between 350 and 1,500 people.

Although the wide-scale protests were crushed, discontent has never stopped simmering, and demonstrat­ions and strikes by various sectors continue to flare up.

“Don’t you guys use cooking oil? Or chicken? Don’t you buy sugar or rice? Don’t you eat anything? I shouted this to a riot police officer,” one protester said on Twitter.

Is there anything else fueling the strife?

Iran’s standoff with the West in the early years of the Islamic Republic drove it to implement a massive food self-sufficienc­y plan, which has resulted in a dire water crisis for the arid country. Frequent riots by farmers from 2009 to 2019 were a direct consequenc­e of that plan, which dried up many rivers and lakes through overconsum­ption of undergroun­d water supplies.

Over the last year, dozens of cities have been the scene of protests over economic hardship, air pollution and drinking water, including riots over dried-up Lake Urmia in northweste­rn Iran. The government’s plans to address the water shortage have been hamstrung by its lack of funds and the effects of internatio­nal sanctions.

“Unfortunat­ely, we are almost bankrupt in water resources and have lost 30 billion cubic meters of our renewable undergroun­d water resources due to excessive consumptio­n and land subsidence,” said engineer Mostafa Fadaeifard, an expert in water management. “The country is prone to more and more riots, even much more serious than the ones we had before.

“Unless the JCPOA is revived and more cash flows into the major desalinati­on projects, the country will be lost.”

A building collapse May 23 in southweste­rn Iran that killed 37 people has also sparked protests, including one late last month at which demonstrat­ors booed and shouted down a cleric sent by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to speak to mourners. Video of the event appeared to show police clubbing protesters amid clouds of tear gas.

Can a revival of the nuclear deal quell unrest in Iran?

The Iranian government is under intense pressure to improve people’s lives, which a reinstatem­ent of the JCPOA could help achieve by relaxing the internatio­nal sanctions that have strangled the economy.

Many Iranians have pinned their hopes for an economic comeback on the revival of the nuclear deal. But as speculatio­n circulated about a possible failure of the talks, Iran’s currency, the rial, lost 20% of its value.

Some politician­s and analysts have maintained their confidence that, as one member of parliament recently said, an agreement is “at hand.”

Mojtaba Najafi, a blogger, commentato­r and professor of media and communicat­ions at the Sorbonne in Paris, said he was optimistic about the deal’s chances, even though Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, who succeeded moderate Hassan Rouhani last August, is a conservati­ve hard-liner.

Iran’s supreme leader, Khamenei, “still strongly supports” revival of the nuclear accord, Najafi said. “He didn’t endorse it in the final months of Rouhani’s government because he didn’t want to see a moderate or reformist government reaping its benefits. Yet he doesn’t want to see the volatile condition of the country get further exacerbate­d.”

Najafi said the accord’s revival would provide at least some temporary economic relief and allow for space to tackle stubborn structural problems that have held back Iran’s developmen­t.

“Should the JCPOA come back to life, contrary to what many political advisors believe, it would bring fresh blood to Iran’s civic society, which is the driving force for real change in Iran,” Najafi said.

Has Iran been subject to protests and riots before?

In the Islamic Republic’s first two decades, largescale protests were rare and faced the iron fist of rulers who deemed the protesters to be enemies of God.

Demonstrat­ions by elites and students demanding more political and social freedoms were harshly put down in 1999. Some government reforms as well as rapprochem­ent with the West under popular reformist President Mohammad Khatami alleviated some of the discontent for several years.

In 2009, the disputed reelection of hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d ignited the worst riots that post-revolution Iran had seen up to that point, in which at least 72 protesters were killed and opposition leaders put under house arrest.

The nationwide unrest that rocked Iran in 2019 focused on economic grievances rather than political ones. Those grievances continue to give rise to wildcat strikes and protests like those that the country has experience­d in recent weeks.

 ?? STUDENTS Associated Press ?? attend a protest at Tehran University in a 2017 photo from an individual not employed by the Associated Press and obtained by the AP outside Iran.
STUDENTS Associated Press attend a protest at Tehran University in a 2017 photo from an individual not employed by the Associated Press and obtained by the AP outside Iran.

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