Three Accounting Firms Pull Out Of Iran
By Geoff Dyer
April 26, 2013
Grant Thornton and two other accounting firms are pulling out of Iran, creating further difficulties for foreign companies still operating in the country.
RSM, a UK-based firm, and Crowe Horwath of the US have joined Grant Thornton, one of the second-tier international accountancy firms, in leaving Iran after coming under US political pressure.
The firms are the latest in a long list of international businesses which have left Iran in recent years amid strict economic sanctions that have been imposed on Tehran in an effort to influence its nuclear programme.
For the campaigners who are trying to squeeze the Iranian economy, internationally-respected auditors are an important target because they provide the sort of independent scrutiny that some multinationals require in order to maintain operations in foreign countries. The "big four" accounting firms pulled out of Iran in 2010.
"It sends an important message when accountancy firms decide that it is too risky to do business in Iran," said Mark Wallace, the head of United Against Nuclear Iran, a lobby group. "Without respected auditors, it makes it much harder for other international companies to continue doing business there."
Grant Thornton, the UK-based firm, said that it was terminating its relationship with Rymand & Co, an Iranian accounting firm, and said it would not conduct further business in Iran. RSM said it would cease working with Dayarayan Auditing & Financial Services, while Crowe Horwath said it would cut ties with Hoshiyar/Behmand & Co. ...
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McGladrey's accounting network will drop Iranian firm
By Jim Hammerand
April 26, 2013
Advocacy group United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) said it has succeeded in getting global accounting firm network RSM International to cut ties with an Iranian firm.
... UANI said RSM agreed to end its relationship with Dayarayan Auditing & Financial Services Firm in Tehran as of April 30.
Chicago-based McGladrey, formerly headquartered in Minneapolis, is RSM's only member firm in the United States.
UANI CEO Mark Wallace, a former ambassador to the United Nations, asked RSM and McGladrey to sever the network's relationship with Dayarayan in March. He applauded RSM's decision Friday.
"If Iran is too risky for the world's leading accounting firms, then all businesses have a duty to disclose any and all Iran work to shareholders, investors, and regulators - and make plans to leave. Anything less is irresponsible and a failure to disclose material information under relevant law," Wallace said in a news release. ...
The campaign also targeted Chicago-based Grant Thornton, which has an office in Minneapolis. Grant Thornton likewise agreed to stop doing business with an Iranian firm, UANI said.
UANI has previously led campaigns to get companies such as General Electric Co., Caterpillar Inc. and makers of construction cranes to cease business operations in Iran, as a way of pressuring the regime there into changing its nuclear program.
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Click here to learn more about UANI's Accounting Campaign.
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