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Bloomberg: "More than half of global
companies interested in doing business with Iran are holding back for
fear of running afoul of sanctions that remain in place even after its
nuclear deal with world powers, a new survey shows. Fifty-eight of 100
executives of U.K.-based international firms said they aren't confident
they know what precautions need to be taken to protect their
investments and avoid regulatory penalties, according to a report by
global law firm Clyde & Co provided to Bloomberg. Businesses are
also hesitant to expose themselves to the risk of nuclear-related
sanctions being reinstated if Iran violates the deal, which would 'very
likely' lead to a loss of money, the report said. The findings show the
challenges Iran needs to overcome as it seeks to reap the benefit of
last year's landmark nuclear accord... Some 30 percent of executives
questioned said they were not comfortable discussing plans to enter
Iran with their banks, according to the survey conducted by Clyde &
Co at a seminar on Iran-related sanctions relief held in London in
conjunction with the London Chamber of Commerce and Industry. 'If a
third of the businesses looking to enter Iran are so worried about
sanctions that they are fearful of discussing their plans with their
own banks, then there is a problem,' said John Whittaker, a partner at
Clyde & Co. 'The high level of regulation involved is proving too
arduous for most banks, coupled with concerns over handling
Iran-related business.'" http://t.uani.com/1TYns9k
Newsweek: "Both Tehran and Washington
insist they're committed to the accord. But Iran's concerns and the
prospect of the deal collapsing were evident in April, when Valiollah
Seif, Iran's central bank governor, made a rare visit to Washington,
ostensibly to attend the spring meetings of the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund. At a sit-down with Treasury Secretary
Jacob Lew, Seif demanded more sanction relief. 'They need to do
whatever is needed to honor their commitments,' the Iranian banker told
an audience at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a
Washington-based think tank. 'Otherwise, the [nuclear deal] breaks up
under its own terms.' ... Meanwhile, an influential lobby, United
Against Nuclear Iran, is leading a major campaign to discourage
European companies from doing business with Tehran, warning they could
end up violating the remaining sanctions. On Capitol Hill, in addition
to the push for further measures-a move experts say could torpedo the
accord-some lawmakers are pressuring Boeing to pull out of a reported
deal to provide Iran with passenger jets and other services. 'We urge
you not to be complicit in the likely conversion of Boeing aircraft to
IRGC warplanes,' the lawmakers wrote in a letter to Boeing CEO Dennis
Muilenburg in May. And in one more blow to Iran, American pistachio
growers convinced the administration to slap a 200 percent tariff on
Iranian pistachios, effectively eliminating them from the U.S.
market." http://t.uani.com/1W2dryg
CNBC
Africa:
"United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) says President Zuma has a
special responsibility as the first African leader to visit Iran since
the implementation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, to focus
his efforts on pressuring Tehran to halt its destabilising and
provocative behaviour rather than prematurely rewarding the Iranian
regime with lucrative business opportunities. David Ibsen, President of
United Against Nuclear Iran, joined CNBC Africa as we examined South
Africa president's visit to Iran." http://t.uani.com/1svBRnO
Nuclear
& Ballistic Missile Program
Tehran
Times: "A
senior Judiciary official called on Western countries not to violate or
undermine a recent deal between Iran and world powers on Tehran's
nuclear program. Speaking in Tehran on Monday, Mohammad Javad Larijani,
head of the Judiciary department for human rights, noted that Iran has
made major accomplishments in the field of nuclear technology but put
some restrictions on its nuclear program under the deal, Nasim
reported. He warned Western countries against impairing the deal
otherwise Iran would resume its previous work 'at a much higher
speed.'" http://t.uani.com/1TYtPtn
U.S.-Iran
Relations
CNN: "The outgoing Iranian
Parliament is demanding unspecified compensation from the United States
for its involvement in 'spiritual and material damage' for the past 63
years, Iranian state news reported Tuesday. During its Tuesday morning
session, the Parliament cited examples such as the U.S involvement in
the coup of Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh in 1953,
America's support of Iraq in its war with Iran from 1980 to 1988, and
the destruction of oil platforms in the late '80s. This comes as a
response to the U.S. Supreme Court's decision last month, which ruled
that Iran should hand over nearly $2 billion in frozen assets to
Americans affected by attacks that Iran was accused of
organizing." http://t.uani.com/1syce61
Business
Risk
FT: "Iran must implement
macroeconomic and structural reforms and combat money laundering and
terrorist-financing if it is to reintegrate into the global economy,
the International Monetary Fund said on Tuesday. 'The first and most
basic requirement for access to international markets is maintaining
good macroeconomic policies so you are viewed as a good credit...and
creating an environment in which the economy has a better growth
prospect,' David Lipton, the IMF's first deputy managing director, said
in Tehran. He added that Iran could rely on IMF support to develop a
'suitable supervisory structure that is up to the international
standards for preventing money laundering and the financing terrorism'.
Mr Lipton is the first senior IMF official to visit the Islamic
Republic since the 1979 Islamic Revolution." http://t.uani.com/27zfHRp
Sanctions
Relief
Reuters: "Iran's oil exports are set
to surge in May, climbing nearly 60 percent from a year ago, with
European shipments recovering to about half of pre-sanction levels,
according to a source with knowledge of the country's crude lifting
plans. This shows Tehran is regaining market share at a faster pace
than analysts had projected as it battles with Saudi Arabia for
customers by cutting its prices. April loadings at 2.3 million barrels
per day (bpd) were around 15 percent higher than the International
Energy Agency estimated earlier this month. May shipments are set to
jump to 2.1 million bpd from 1.3 million bpd during the same month in
2015, when Iranian exports were constrained by Western sanctions
imposed because of the country's nuclear program. The April loadings
were the highest since January 2012. The increase in loadings suggests
that Iran has overcome a tanker shortage that threatened to derail
attempts to regain market share after the sanctions were lifted in
January... Oil major Total SA is set to take 160,000 bpd of crude in
May, down from the 240,000 bpd loaded in April. The company, along with
Spain's Cepsa, signed import deals with state-owned National Iranian
Oil Co soon after the sanctions were lifted in January. Loadings to
Spain are set for 32,000 bpd in May, while Greece will take 65,000
bpd." http://t.uani.com/205Nps7
Tehran
Times: "Like
many other international companies, Bombardier Inc. and Siemens AG are
willing to develop their activity in the Iranian market in the
post-sanction time, although they consider banking barriers, which are
still in place, an obstacle getting in the way. The following is what
some directors of the two international giants that are participating
in Iran RAILEXPO 2016 (running from May 15 to 18 in Tehran) told the
Tehran Times. 'Now, after having a new situation (lifting of sanctions)
we as many others have an interest to participate in the upcoming
opportunities and when you see the number of exhibitors and
particularly the foreign participants, you see there is an appetite of
the outside industry to participate in the Iranian market
opportunities,' said Dieter Brandenburg, the chief representative of
Bombardier in Iran... Also, Ali Khalatbari, the local representative of
Bombardier in Iran, referred to transfer of technology the priority of
the company for business in the Iranian market. 'For Bombardier having
gained now over the last year in depth knowledge of what the market
requires, the most critical point is transfer of technology. We are
working with Mapna [a group of Iranian companies involved in
implementation of power, oil & gas, railway and other industrial
projects] and IRICO [Iranian Rail Industries Development Company] and
other companies to carry out the projects with manufacturing the units
here in Iran rather than importing from Europe.' ... 'Iranian customers
are very open. It is a pleasure to work with them,' said Joerg
Scheifler, the senior executive vice president of Siemens LLC Mobility
Middle East... 'Despite the sanctions, we were quite active in Iran. We
have locomotive factory here with our partner Mapna. So, our
relationship with rail industry in Iran is quite deep and long,'
Scheifler noted." http://t.uani.com/25b7VhV
Korea
Times:
"Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering (DSME) has won the
right to manage Iran's state-run shipbuilder, paving its way into the
Middle Eastern nation with huge growth potential. DSME said Monday that
it recently signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the Iranian
government to run Iran Shipbuilding & Offshore Industries Complex.
Under the agreement, DSME will also transfer manufacturing technology
to the Iranian shipbuilder. The deal is widely expected to help DSME
and other domestic shipbuilders win orders from refiners and other
companies in Iran... Iran has been seeking to cooperate with Korean
shipbuilders to modernize its aging dockyards... According to DSME
officials, the Industrial Development and Renovation Organization of
Iran (IDRO), the state-run organization in charge of the nation's
strategic industries such as automobiles and shipbuilding, is seeking
to form a partnership with the Korean shipbuilder. Among others, IDRO
wants to acquire advanced technology and dockyard management knowhow
from DSME in order to transform Iran into a shipbuilding industry hub
in the Middle East. The organization also requested DSME to invest in
Iran to manufacture equipment and intermediary materials." http://t.uani.com/1ODunZB
Extremism
AP: "Germany is condemning a
contest in Iran for cartoons depicting the Holocaust, saying it sows
hatred and deepens divisions in the Middle East. The event was
organized by non-governmental bodies with support from Iran's
hard-liners. A previous contest in 2006 got a boost from then-President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who referred to the Holocaust as a 'myth.' German
Foreign Ministry spokesman Martin Schaefer said Wednesday that 'the
murder of 6 million men, women and children during the Holocaust, for
which we Germans bear guilt and responsibility, must not be abandoned
to ridicule.' Schaefer said German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter
Steinmeier made clear during a February visit to Tehran that no further
such competition should take place, and that it was 'very regrettable'
it went ahead." http://t.uani.com/1YBV5C9
The
Hill: "Iran's
revolutionary guard has accused Kim Kardashian West of using her
Instagram account to corrupt the country's women and youth. The Iranian
police organization that monitors the country's Islamic culture to
avoid outside influence has said that the reality TV star is working in
coordination with Instagram. 'They are targeting young people and women,'
said the organization's spokesman Mostafa Alizadeh, according to Iran
Wire, a website run by Iranian journalists. 'Ms. Kim Kardashian is a
popular fashion model so Instagram's CEO tells her, 'make this
native,'' he added. 'There is no doubt that financial support is
involved as well. We are taking this very seriously.' Iranian
authorities have arrested eight people in modeling, photography or
fashion throughout the country whose photos seemed at odds with the
Islamic culture. 'Our aim is to teach them a lesson and make them wake
up,' said a represenative from the prosecutor's office, reported Iran
Wire." http://t.uani.com/1TYtcjz
Human
Rights
BBC: "A political storm has
erupted in Iran after the daughter of former President Akbar Hashemi
Rafsanjani visited a leader of the persecuted Bahai religious minority
while she was on leave from prison. Senior conservative clerics
denounced Faezeh Hashemi following her meeting with Fariba Kamalabadi,
a mother-of-three who was temporarily released and allowed home to see
her newborn grandchild. Iran's religious establishment regards the
Bahai faith, which emerged in Iran in the 19th Century, as a heretical
sect. Bahais, who number approximately 300,000 and are heavily
concentrated in Tehran and Semnan, are often denounced as unclean and
accused of being agents of the US and Israel. In response to the
criticism of Ms Hashemi's visit and calls for her to be prosecuted, her
father issued a terse public reprimand saying she had made a big
mistake that had to be rectified. He described the Bahai faith as 'a
deviant sect', which 'we disavow and have always done.'" http://t.uani.com/1srgfs2
Foreign
Affairs
AP: "The government of the
Maldives said Tuesday it has decided to sever 40-year-old diplomatic
ties with Iran, saying the country's policies in the Middle East are
detrimental to peace and security in the region. The Maldives foreign
ministry said in a statement that peace in the Middle East is also
linked to the island nation's own peace, stability and security... The
Islamic Summit held last month in Turkey called on Iran to pursue a
policy based on the principle of 'good neighborliness, non-interference
in their domestic affairs, respect for their independence and
territorial sovereignty, (and) resolving differences by peaceful means
in accordance with OIC (Organization of Islamic Cooperation) and the UN
Charters,' the foreign ministry statement said. 'The Maldives calls on
Iran to show more commitment and tangible results in implementing the
recommendations of the OIC,' it said." http://t.uani.com/1Tfq5te
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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
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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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