Texarkana Gazette

Quake revives criticism of sanctions

- By Nasser Karimi and Mohammad Nasiri

KERMANSHAH, Iran—With Iranian-Americans abroad unable to send money directly to Iran to aid those affected by this week’s powerful earthquake that killed over 530 people, criticism of U.S. sanctions on Iran flared up anew on Thursday.

The 2015 nuclear deal Tehran struck with world powers lifted some sanctions but others, dating back as far as the days after the 1979 U.S. Embassy takeover, still stand, including those that prohibit about 1 million Iranian-Americans from directly sending cash to Iran.

The state-run IRNA news agency, as well as other media, published articles criticizin­g the rules.

“Despite all the difficulti­es, Iranians living in the U.S. are doing their best to devise innovative solutions to send their humanitari­an supplies to the quake-hit areas in western Iran,” IRNA’s report said.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said earlier this week that his country does not need foreign help for the quake and it is capable of managing the aftermath on its own.

President Donald Trump has not commented on the earthquake so far. He has refused to re-certify the Iran nuclear deal, sending it Congress instead, and has accused Iran of arming Shiite rebels in Yemen with ballistic missiles to attack Saud Arabia.

The U.S. Treasury has lifted some sanctions in the past to help with Iranian earthquake relief, most notably in 2003 under the administra­tion of President George W. Bush when a magnitude 6.6 earthquake killed 26,000 people in Bam. That was even after Bush named Iran a member of the “axis of evil.”

In a statement to The Associated Press, the Treasury called the earthquake “tragic” and said it allows donations of food, clothing and medicine to previously approved American organizati­ons, which then send them on to Iran. Those organizati­ons also can send up to $500,000 a year in cash, the Treasury said.

However, the Treasury did not respond to questions whether it would lift sanctions as in 2003.

Without that, banks and other organizati­ons will remain fearful of running afoul of U.S. laws, which “tend to be fuzzy, and the fines … seem to be astronomic­al,” said Trita Parsi, the founder and president of the National Iranian American Council.

A bank once told “us the best way to send money to Iran is to fill a suitcase with cash and fly to Tehran,” Parsi told the AP. “The banks make money from these transactio­ns. When they say no to a transactio­n, they are just terrified.”

Parsi said that trickles down to online crowdfundi­ng websites. He said his organizati­on received several complaints about online fundraiser­s for Iran being shut down and money being returned to donors.

Sunday night’s earthquake hit about 19 miles outside the eastern Iraqi city of Halabja, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, and struck 14.4 miles below the surface, a somewhat shallow depth that can amplify the damage. Iran’s seismologi­c center has said the quake struck on Iranian soil.

The official IRNA news agency has said that 530 were killed while state TV put the number at 432. At least 100 people are believed to have been buried by families in rural villages without going to authoritie­s for death certificat­es, which may explain the discrepanc­y. Over 9,300 people were injured.

In Iraq, nine people were killed and 550 were injured, all in the country’s northern Kurdish region, according to the United Nations.

Iranian doctors and nurses continued to offer aid Thursday to those affected.

In Kermanshah, the province hardest hit by the quake, the Taleghani Hospital in its capital remained full of injured, their gurneys filling rooms and hallways as they received medical care.

 ?? AP Photo/Vahid Salemi ?? A man injured in Sunday’s earthquake receives treatment Thursday at Taleghani hospital in Kermanshah, Iran. Criticism of U.S. sanctions on Iran rekindled Thursday over Iranian-Americans abroad being unable to send money directly to aid those affected...
AP Photo/Vahid Salemi A man injured in Sunday’s earthquake receives treatment Thursday at Taleghani hospital in Kermanshah, Iran. Criticism of U.S. sanctions on Iran rekindled Thursday over Iranian-Americans abroad being unable to send money directly to aid those affected...

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