San Diego Union-Tribune

PRICE HIKES STIR PANIC, ANGER IN IRAN

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Iran abruptly raised prices as much as 300 percent 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.

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