Monday, July 8, 2013

Eye on Iran: Iran Devalues Official Rial Rate by More Than Half











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AFP: "Iran's central bank on Saturday drastically devalued the national currency's fixed subsidised rate against the dollar, as the Islamic republic struggles to shore up its faltering economy. The rial has lost more than two thirds of its value on the open market since early 2012, when the United States and the European Union imposed harsh economic sanctions curbing Iran's ability to export oil and conduct financial transactions. The central bank on Saturday was selling one US dollar for 24,779 rials at the subsidised rate available only to select importers to procure basic commodities and medicine, according to the bank's website at http://cbi.ir That rate was a 102-percent increase from 12,260 rials for one dollar that had been kept artificially low since January 2012. The new 'reference' rate is still far stronger than the dollar available to ordinary buyers and travellers at the unofficial open market, which was 33,200 rials per dollar at midday." http://t.uani.com/12kMIvz

Iran Human Rights: "At least 14 prisoners have been executed according to official and unofficial reports from Iran today [July 6]. Seven other prisoners were scheduled to be executed today according to unconfirmed reports. According to official and unofficial reports at least 60 prisoners have been executed after the Presidential elections in Iran... According to 'Human rights and democracy activists in Iran' (HRDAI) 11 prisoners, five of them women, were hanged in the prison of Zahedan this morning." http://t.uani.com/12bu2zz

Breitbart: "The Iranian regime, pursuing a vision of global dominance, has taken media propaganda to the next level. On July 2, 2007, they launched PRESSTV, which has turned into an internationally recognized media outlet with 24 hour English-language programming. Cloaked with a veneer of legitimacy and the purported transparency of a major news network, PRESS TV is in reality an appendage of the Iranian government, created to further embitter its populace against the West... Thanks to pressure placed by European governments and the tireless efforts from groups such as UANI (United Against Nuclear Iran), progress has been made towards limiting PRESSTV's scope and reach. PRESSTV, predictably, blamed the 'Zionist lobby' for this occurrence." http://t.uani.com/12wlVxr
Election Repression Toolkit 
Nuclear Program

Reuters: "The U.N. atomic agency and Iran may hold a new round of nuclear talks in August, diplomats said on Monday, in what would be their first meeting since last month's election of a relative moderate as the Islamic state's president. If it does take place, the meeting will be scrutinized by the West for any sign of increased Iranian readiness to compromise in the decade-old international dispute over its nuclear program after the June 14 election of Hassan Rouhani. A diplomat in Vienna, where the International Atomic Energy Agency is based, said he believed the aim was for an IAEA-Iran meeting in mid-August but that no decision had yet been taken. 'I think that no meeting in August would be a bad sign,' another Western envoy said. That would be shortly before the IAEA issues its next, quarterly report on Iran's nuclear program in late August and ahead of a week-long session of the U.N. agency's 35-nation governing board in September." http://t.uani.com/1ageVOa

Sanctions

AP: "Iran's central bank is allowing most importers to buy local currency at half the former official price as part of attempts to attract investors to an economy battered by Western sanctions... The central bank offered most importers an exchange rate of 24,779 rials for $1 on Sunday, a day after the official announcement. That compares with the previous government-set rate of 12,260 rials." http://t.uani.com/16ZIcHz

Bloomberg: "The Iranian currency appreciated in unregulated trading after the central bank canceled its fixed, subsidized rate for the dollar. The rial strengthened to 33,400 to the dollar at 11 a.m. in Tehran from 33,850 on July 2, marking a 1.3 percent gain, according to rates compiled by Daily Rates For Gold Coins and Foreign Currencies, a Facebook page used by businessmen based in Iran and abroad. Iran's currency has appreciated 8.5 percent since the day before the June 14 presidential election that made Hassan Rohani the country's new head of state." http://t.uani.com/14CZLNf

Bloomberg: "Iran will try to lure foreign investors with tax exemptions ranging as high as 100 percent, Iranian Deputy Economy Minister Behrouz Alishiri said. Foreigners investing in the country's agriculture sector won't have to pay any taxes, and investments in industry and mining will be exempt up to 80 percent, Alishiri said yesterday, according to Tehran-based newspaper Tehran Times. He didn't forecast how much investment the exemptions would spur. While international sanctions have restricted foreign investment, Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad-Najjar said in March that Iran attracted $7 billion from abroad in the Iranian year ended March 20, compared with $5 billion the preceding year." http://t.uani.com/12m4I93

Platts: "New US sanctions have blocked two legs of the triangle of shipping routes that Iran used to operate between the Persian Gulf, East Asia and Europe, leaving only the Persian Gulf-East Asia route in operation, the managing director of state-owned Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines said this week. 'Before the tightening of sanctions, Iran had three transportation lines -- Asia-Europe, Persian Gulf-Europe and [Persian Gulf]-East Asia, of which Asia-Europe and Persian Gulf-Europe have been shut down,' students' news agency ISNA quoted Mohammad Hossein Dajmar as saying. Iran's trading with Europe had decreased and there had been a corresponding increase in the country's trade with East Asia. Accordingly, facilities and assets previously used on the routes serving Europe were transferred to the East Asia route, Dajmar said. That said, some Iranian goods were still finding their way to Europe after transshipment in Arab states along the Persian Gulf, he said." http://t.uani.com/1aglikv

Human Rights


Iran Human Rights: "Five prisoners were hanged in the prison of Qazvin (west of Tehran) early this morning July 7, reported the official Iranian media... At least 65 people have been executed in the first three weeks after the presidential elections in Iran." http://t.uani.com/10HAgK2

Radio Zamaneh: "Nasrin Sotoudeh, the jailed Iranian human rights lawyer who had been granted a furlough, was summoned back to Evin Prison on Sunday July 7. Sotoudeh's husband, Reza Khandan, reports that his wife was given a four-day leave, which was later extended another 10 days, but she was finally summoned back to prison. The report indicates that Sotoudeh had written twice to the prosecutor's office to renew her furlough, but her requests were turned down. Khandan reports that in view of the election and the prospect of change in the country, they were hoping that Sotoudeh would be given an extended leave, which apparently has not been the case. Sotoudeh has been serving a six-year sentence since September of 2011. She was arrested in the wave of arrests targeting activists and journalists following the election protests of 2009." http://t.uani.com/156N3oH

AFP: "Iran suspects them of spying, but friends of eight Slovak paragliders detained in May know them as freedom-loving adrenalin junkies who travel the world to film high-flying documentaries... Iran's judiciary said earlier this week it was probing nine people -- one Iranian and eight Slovaks -- whom it arrested for 'illegal activities, including photographing restricted areas' in the central Isfahan province. Iran first announced the Slovaks' arrests on May 22." http://t.uani.com/1aQ6j07

Domestic Politics

AP: "Iranian state television says the country has opened its own domestically made national email service. The report aired Sunday quoted Information and Communication Technology Minister Mohammad Hasan Nami as saying local experts created the service's software. The report said each Iranian will be assigned an email address. The country's postal service will manage the email service. Iran has discussed for years having its own domestic email service as the government occasionally has blocked access to foreign email providers like Gmail and Yahoo. The country also has blocked and made illegal virtual private networks that allow Iranians to freely use the Internet and access banned websites like those for opposition groups." http://t.uani.com/14CZ8TU

WT: "Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said during Sunday's farewell ceremony that one of his biggest accomplishments while president was advancing the perception that the Holocaust never happened. 'That was a taboo topic that no one in the West allowed to be heard,' he said, The Times of Israel reported. 'We put it forward at the global level. That broke the spine of the Western capitalistic regime.' Mr. Ahmadinejad's remarks were on the Iranian Fars news agency in Arabic, but they were omitted from the site's English version, The Times of Israel reported. In another part of his speech, Mr. Ahmadinejad said the Arab region should ban together and take revenge on Israel for its leaders' treatment of Palestinians." http://t.uani.com/18IaB8Y

Foreign Affairs

WSJ: "The fall of Egypt's President Mohammed Morsi presents Iran with a new challenge: Establishing a relationship with an as-yet-undefined leadership while distancing itself from past efforts to court the Muslim Brotherhood... A chorus of Friday prayer sermons across Iran by representatives of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei slammed Mr. Morsi and the Brotherhood for choosing not to sever ties with Israel, honoring Egypt's peace accord with the Jewish state, and maintaining relations with the U.S. The sermons unanimously said that the people of Egypt had risen up against Mr. Morsi because he had failed to be independent from the West and form an alliance with the 'axis of resistance'-Iran, Hezbollah and Syria." http://t.uani.com/1a47SVo

AP: "Iran's Foreign Ministry on Sunday criticized the Egyptian military's toppling of the nation's Islamist president, calling the move improper in its first official reaction. 'We do not consider proper the intervention by military forces in politics to replace a democratically elected administration,' said ministry spokesman Abbas Araghchi, according to the official news agency IRNA. Egypt's military ousted Mohammed Morsi Wednesday after four days of mass protests against him. Araghchi said that supporters of Morsi should not give up their efforts to reinstate him. Elections and not 'the streets' should not decide who is president of Egypt, he said. 'Islamists and revolutionaries should not be frustrated,' Araghchi said. On the other hand, he said, 'We do not see the recent events in Egypt as a defeat for Islamic awakening.'" http://t.uani.com/1d7bqWl

Opinion & Analysis

Ray Takeyh in WashPost: "For Western officials trying to determine what kind of leader they'll face in Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, his thoughtful 2011 memoir reveals much about the man who will lead the Islamic republic. Published in Iran and available only in Persian, the book covers Rouhani's time as the country's chief negotiator on nuclear policy, from 2003 to 2005. The man who jumps out of these pages is an establishment figure with a deep commitment to the Islamic republic and its nuclear aspirations, a man who will beguile the West and preserve as much advantage as possible for Iran. Historians often suggest that Iran's clerical regime resurrected the shah'satomic infrastructure after Iraq invaded the country in 1980. In this telling, deterrence and self-defense are at the core of the Iranian nuclear calculus. But Rouhani says the revolutionaries' attraction to nuclear science actually began when they were still lingering in exile. In 1979, when Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and his disciples appeared certain to assume power, an Iranian scientific delegation journeyed to Paris and implored the aging mullah to scrap the nuclear program, which was exorbitant and inefficient. The cagy Khomeini ignored such pleas. A year before Saddam Hussein's armies attacked Iran, Khomeini had decided to preserve his nuclear inheritance. During the initial decade of the Islamic republic, the regime's preoccupation with consolidating power and prosecuting its war with Iraq eclipsed other priorities. Still, Rouhani describes a determined effort to secure nuclear technologies from abroad and complete the fuel cycle. Those efforts were redoubled during Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani's presidency in the early 1990s and were sustained by the reformist president Mohammad Khatami. Indeed, Rouhani is at pains to disentangle nuclear policy from Iran's contentious politics, insisting that all governments should share credit for the program's progress. 'I respect all individuals who in the path of nuclear empowerment have taken important steps,' he notes. And throughout, he sticks to the argument that the nuclear program is for peaceful purposes. Rouhani spent much of his tenure negotiating with the three European powers - Britain, France and Germany - over what kind of nuclear program Iran was allowed to have. The signature event of his time as a negotiator was his country's voluntary suspension of its program in 2004. Those were heady days in the Middle East, with America's shock-and-awe campaign in Iraq intimidating other recalcitrant regimes, such as Iran's, into accommodation. 'No one thought that Saddam's regime would fall in three weeks,' Rouhani recalls. 'The military leadership had anticipated that Saddam would not fall easily and that America would have to fight the Iraqi army for at least six months to a year before reaching Saddam's palace.' Yet, the proximity of American guns behooved the theocracy to act with caution and halt its nuclear activities. Still, Rouhani has spent the past decade slyly suggesting that Iran used the suspension period to establish the technological foundation that enabled the nuclear program's subsequent progress. I suspect that such claims are overstated; Iran's suspension was a product of fear and thus fairly comprehensive. Instead, the gains Iran has made since the program resumed are a tribute to the ingenuity of its scientific establishment, which is often - and unwisely - discounted by the West. Whatever political support Rouhani has among Iran's reformers, he is not one of them; political freedom has rarely been a priority for him. (During the late 1990s, when Khatami and his allies were seeking to expand individual rights and strengthen Iran's anemic civil society, Rouhani was indifferent to their efforts.) Still, unlike many militant ideologues, he belongs to a more tempered wing of the theocracy that sees the nuclear debate in the larger context of Iran's international relations... However, Rouhani's case is not without its contradictions. He insists that Iran can expand its nuclear program while reclaiming its commercial contracts, even though today Iran stands in violation of numerous Security Council resolutions and cannot reenter the global economy until it meets U.N. demands. Tone and style matter, but what awaits President Rouhani is the hard trade-off of dispensing with critical aspects of the program in exchange for relief from sanctions." http://t.uani.com/12dBoGc

Eye on Iran is a periodic news summary from United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) a program of the American Coalition Against Nuclear Iran, Inc., a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Eye on Iran is not intended as a comprehensive media clips summary but rather a selection of media elements with discreet analysis in a PDA friendly format. For more information please email Press@UnitedAgainstNuclearIran.com

United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) is a non-partisan, broad-based coalition that is united in a commitment to prevent Iran from fulfilling its ambition to become a regional super-power possessing nuclear weapons.  UANI is an issue-based coalition in which each coalition member will have its own interests as well as the collective goal of advancing an Iran free of nuclear weapons.

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