Iran parliament censures Rouhani in sign
pragmatists losing sway
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[August 28, 2018]
By Bozorgmehr Sharafedin
LONDON (Reuters) - Iran's parliament voted
on Tuesday to reject President Hassan Rouhani's explanations for
economic hardship after a dramatic grilling on live TV, a sign his
pragmatic faction is losing sway to hardline rivals as new U.S.
sanctions begin to bite.
The vote in parliament came two days after lawmakers sacked the minister
of economy and finance and weeks after they sacked the labor minister,
blaming them for the collapse of the rial currency and surging
inflation.
Rouhani won two landslide elections on a platform of economic reform and
opening Iran up to the outside world, and his pragmatic supporters have
a majority in the parliament. But his reputation and political influence
have taken a sharp hit as his promised economic gains have failed to
materialize.
His highest profile achievement was to negotiate the lifting of
financial sanctions on Iran in a 2015 deal with world powers over its
nuclear program, but U.S. President Donald Trump pulled out in May and
Washington has re-imposed sanctions.
Rouhani spoke out in parliament in defense of his economic record,
blaming the country's woes on the U.S. sanctions rather than his team's
management. But a majority of lawmakers voted to reject his explanation
in four out of five areas.
There were conflicting reports about what would follow from the vote:
several Iranian news agencies said Rouhani's case would now be referred
to the judiciary, although the spokesman for the parliamentary
leadership, Behrouz Nemati, said lawmakers must hold further discussion
before that would take place.
The action in parliament is a further sign of how the Trump
administration's decision to re-impose sanctions could affect Iran's
leadership and its relationship with the outside world, potentially for
decades to come.
Iran's rulers have been divided between a pragmatic faction that aims
for better international relations, and hardliners who are wary of
reforms. Trump's decision to abandon the nuclear deal was opposed by
U.S. allies in Europe, who argued that he undermined Rouhani and
strengthened the hands of the hardliners.
While Rouhani and his cabinet run Iran's day-to-day affairs, ultimate
authority lies with the Supreme Leader, 79-year-old Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, in power since 1989. Weakening the pragmatists now could
affect the choice of Khamenei's successor.
For now, Rouhani's own position appears safe. The judiciary could
determine that he broke the law and parliament has the power to impeach
him, but experts on Iranian politics say power struggles are more likely
to play out indirectly.
"The parliament's move is politically motivated and indicates that
tensions would increase in the Islamic Republic in coming months," Saeed
Laylaz, an Iranian economist, told Reuters by telephone from Tehran.
"Iranian political factions have always used international issues to
pursue their domestic gains," he added.
After the sacking of the two ministers this month, Tasnim news agency
reported that 70 lawmakers had signed a motion to impeach a third: the
Minister of Industry, Mines and Business.
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Iranian President Hassan Rouhani speaks during a parliamentary
session in Tehran, Iran August 28, 2018. President Official
Website/Handout via REUTERS
Rouhani has bowed to pressure and fired the head of the central
bank. A deputy central bank governor was arrested by the judiciary
on corruption charges in a crackdown that also saw foreign exchange
dealers rounded up.
"U.S. PLOT"
The lawmakers asked Rouhani on Tuesday about five subjects:
unemployment, slow economic growth, the fall of the rial,
cross-border smuggling, and the lack of access by Iranian banks to
global financial services. The parliament found only Rouhani's
answer about banks satisfactory.
"I want to assure the Iranian nation that we will not allow the U.S.
plot against the Islamic Republic to succeed," Rouhani told
parliament. "We will not let this bunch of anti-Iranians in the
White House be able to plot against us."
Iran's official unemployment rate is 12 percent, with youth
unemployment as high as 25 percent in a country where 60 percent of
the 80 million population is under 30. The rial has lost more than
two-thirds of its value in a year.
Iran's economy has suffered not only from sanctions but also from
pervasive corruption and the concentration of its wealth and trade
in the hands of big firms controlled by the hardline Revolutionary
Guards military force.
Washington imposed a new round of sanctions in August targeting
Iran’s trade in gold and other precious metals, its purchases of
U.S. dollars and its car industry. Worse is yet to come, with a new
round of sanctions to be imposed in November that Washington says
aims to cut Iran's oil exports to zero.
The plunge in the currency and soaring inflation have sparked
sporadic demonstrations against profiteering and corruption, with
many protesters chanting slogans against both the government and
Supreme Leader Khamenei.
Rouhani said such anti-government protests had encouraged Trump to
try to provoke more unrest by harming Iran's economy.
"The protests tempted Trump to withdraw from the nuclear deal," he
said, asking lawmakers to support his cabinet and not add to
anti-government sentiment.
Although the economic problems were critical, Rouhani said: "More
important than that is that many people have lost their faith in the
future of the Islamic Republic and are in doubt about its power."
(Reporting by Bozorgmehr Sharafedin; Editing by Alison Williams and
Peter Graff)
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