For Immediate ReleaseMay 23, 2016Contact: press@uani.com
ICYMI: UANI Full-Page Ad Responds to London Euromoney Iran Conference Featuring Head of Iran's Central Bank
BBC Persian Highlights UANI Ad, UANI CEO Wallace Outlines Iran Business Risks in City A.M. Op-ed
New York, NY -
United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) continued its international campaign to educate companies about the risks of doing business in Iran by responding to the
May 19 Euromoney Iran Conference held in London, featuring Iran's Central Bank Governor Valiollah Seif.
In a full-page ad that ran in London's Daily Telegraph on May 19, UANI warned, "Iran Business is Risky Business," and "The RISKS of doing business with the Ayatollah are simply TOO HIGH." The ad also featured a cartoon illustrating these risks as a rejoinder to Iran's widely condemned Holocaust Cartoon Contest which kicked-off in Tehran on May 14.
BBC Persian highlighted UANI's ad in its coverage of the Euromoney conference. On May 16, UANI Chairman Senator Joseph I. Lieberman discussed the upcoming Euromoney Iran Conference in an
interview on Sky News.
In an op-ed related to the conference published in the London business newspaper
City A.M. the same day, UANI Ambassador Mark D. Wallace warned of, "
Five reasons why investing in Iran is too great a risk for British firms." Amb. Wallace concluded:
For Iran to be integrated into the global business community, it must undertake fundamental reforms to attract business; commit itself to peaceful coexistence with its neighbours and those in the West; treat its own citizens with dignity; and put in place the fundamental building blocks of a free market economy. Those delegates walking into today's conference should keep this in mind as they listen to people talk about investing in Iran as if it were like investing in Western Europe.
The full text of the op-ed follows:
Five reasons why investing in Iran is too great a risk for British firms
By Mark D Wallace
City A.M.May 19, 2016
This morning, in a giant ballroom in one of London's most luxurious hotels, executives from leading corporations will gather for a major investment conference. In some ways, the conference will be like dozens that take place across London each year. However, this one has an unusual and ominous twist: it is organised precisely to encourage British and European financiers to invest heavily in Iran.
According to the conference marketing materials, the event, co-sponsored by the Central Bank of the Islamic Republic of Iran, is designed to help facilitate the re-integration of the country into the global business community. Everything about the event oozes hope for respectability, but it cannot gloss over a simple truth. The conference - whose lead sponsors include entities whose property remains blocked in the United States - is encouraging investment in the world's leading state sponsor of terrorism, in a country that brutally represses its own people, and one that simply cannot be trusted to play by the rules of the global financial system.
Companies contemplating rolling the dice with the Ayatollah should keep in mind five broad sets of business risk: investing in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC); revocation of the Iran nuclear deal; local corruption and criminality; dangers to the safety of staff and their families; and massive reputational risk. But the prospect of breaching the laws of the leading economic powers - most obviously the United States - is perhaps the most urgent risk for British businesses considering work in Iran.
Iran is a largely unknown entity for many businesses, and they could inadvertently find themselves working with entities that are secretly managed or owned by a hugely powerful terrorist organisation - the IRGC. With more than 100,000 members, the IRGC is primarily a military organisation, but it exerts huge economic clout. It controls key strategic industries - like Iran's energy sector - and has a major role in the black market. Working with the IRGC would be illegal but also difficult to guard against because the group operates through numerous front companies.
Businesses might also find themselves in a difficult legal position were far-reaching sanctions to be reintroduced on Iran. The international nuclear deal agreed to put limits on what Iran can do in the nuclear field. Given Tehran's past record, it is reasonable to assume that there is a high risk that it will flout this agreement and continue to pursue the development of nuclear weapons. Should this happen, previously lifted sanctions would be reinstated, and international business would quickly flee.
The risk of corruption and criminality is perhaps an obvious one but it bears repeating. The US government considers the entire Iranian financial sector to be a primary money laundering and terror financing concern. That's not to mention that, in Transparency International's 2015 Corruption Perceptions Index, Iran ranks 130 out of 168 countries.
In Iran, a country where the security apparatus is large, active, and outside of any conventional control, the risk of hacking and cyber-attacks remains real. Iran is also an aggressive and unstable country, and this compounds the risks. The insurance sector is understandably nervous about underwriting businesses' activities in such a state.
Then there is the risk to the actual staff who work for the companies that will be investing. The Iranian legal system does not respect human rights and due process. Foreign nationals are at risk of arbitrary arrest and Iranian expatriates are particularly vulnerable. Many companies would look towards expatriate staff to build their operations in Iran - or to recruit new staff - but this would not be a safe and viable model.
Finally, there is a clear reputational risk. This reputational risk should make businesses think hard about self-preservation. The British business community wants to do the right thing, and with that in mind, they must consider some basic truths about the state of Iran. Despite today's soothing messages, Iran remains the world's leading state sponsor of terrorism, supporting groups like Hezbollah and Hamas and many others. Furthermore, it is a deeply repressive regime that routinely abuses its own population. Homosexuality is not only illegal but consensual sexual relations between two men are punishable by death. The Iranian state is so keen on the death penalty that it executes more people per capita than any other country in the world.
For Iran to be integrated into the global business community, it must undertake fundamental reforms to attract business; commit itself to peaceful coexistence with its neighbours and those in the West; treat its own citizens with dignity; and put in place the fundamental building blocks of a free market economy. Those delegates walking into today's conference should keep this in mind as they listen to people talk about investing in Iran as if it were like investing in Western Europe.
Mark D Wallace is chief executive of United Against Nuclear Iran. He served as US ambassador to the United Nations, representative for UN Management and Reform, from 2006 to 2008.
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About UANIUANI is an independent, not-for-profit, non-partisan, advocacy group founded in 2008 by Ambassador Mark D. Wallace, Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, former CIA Director Jim Woolsey, and Middle East Expert Ambassador Dennis Ross, that seeks to heighten awareness of the danger the Iranian regime poses to the world.
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