Car plant shows limits to Iran's economic ambitions in
Syria
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[November 14, 2018]
By Angus McDowall and Babak Dehghanpisheh
HASSIA, Syria/GENEVA (Reuters) - At an
Iranian government-owned car plant near Homs, the small number of
vehicles on the assembly line underscores the obstacles hobbling
Tehran's economic ambitions in Syria.
The plant was set up before Syria's war began as the two allies tried to
bring their economies closer together and was restarted in 2016 on
Tehran's orders after having closed early in the conflict.
Instead of the 50-60 cars a day it assembled before the war, it now
makes only three or four, and dozens of vehicles gather dust in its
warehouse because even when discounts are offered, too few Syrians can
afford them.
Car parts have to be shipped by sea instead of via the shorter land
route because Syria's border with Iraq is closed, and Western sanctions
make it hard to transfer money.
That combination of a battered market, logistical problems and sanctions
-- as well as competition with companies from Damascus' other main ally,
Russia -- affect many Iranian businesses operating in Syria.
Tehran has played a crucial part in helping President Bashar al-Assad
overcome seven years of rebellion, providing military expertise,
materiel and fighters from militia it supports around the region.
It has given Damascus direct financial aid and help restoring its
infrastructure, but has also angled for economic concessions and market
access that might eventually provide some compensation for its
investment in the war.
Iranian businesses say they want to export to Syria or do business
there, and are optimistic that the market will improve as Damascus
pushes toward reconstruction.
"We're looking at construction projects there -- residential, office
space, sports halls. There's a very good market there," said Mahdi
Ghavam, public relations head at Sherakate Omran va Maskan Iran, a
developer tied to the state-controlled Bonyad Mostazafan, a charitable
foundation that took over numerous private businesses after the
revolution.
Since the conflict began, there have been more Iranian goods for sale,
though not on the same scale as in Iraq, which shares a long border with
the Islamic Republic and where Iran has gained extensive market
dominance.
Iranian dates, saffron, raisins and cosmetic products are found in
Damascus shops, alongside goods from numerous other countries.
CLOSE RELATIONSHIP
In the Saipa Syria car factory, a large poster celebrating the alliance
shows Assad during a visit to Iran alongside its then president, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad.
With over half the country back under his control, including the biggest
cities, and with the reopening of the border with Jordan accelerating
Syria's reintegration with neighboring economies, Assad is turning
toward reconstruction.
But while front lines seem to have stabilized for now, the war is not
over, big parts of Syria remain outside Assad's grip and the economy is
a fraction of its pre-war size.
"There's a lot of damage of course. A lot of the economic infrastructure
has been destroyed. But it's also an opportunity," said Reza Aghaziarati,
export manager and adviser for Feridolin home appliances manufacturer.
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An employee works inside the Saipa Syria Factory in the industrial
city of Hassia in Homs, Syria September 9, 2018. Picture taken
September 9, 2018. REUTERS/Omar Sanadiki
Syrian law protecting domestic industry bars imports of electrical appliances,
but Feridolin wants to set up a factory in Syria to make them there, Aghaziarati
said.
For Saipa Syria, the most pressing difficulty is limited demand, said its
general manager, Emad Alavian.
"The purchasing power of customers dropped, but we see an improvement in
conditions. We see new movement," he said, adding that he hoped to double
production in 2019 to around 2,000 cars from the 1,000 he expects to assemble
this year.
Saipa makes small, modestly priced cars and it is poorer Syrians who have been
hit hardest by the war. "We took big discounts from Iran to help the Syrian
customer," Alavian said, but demand has stayed low.
The car parts are shipped in wooden crates to the Mediterranean port of Latakia,
a journey that adds thousands of miles to the direct -- but closed -- land route
through Iraq.
"There is no problem with transporting the parts from Iran, but there is a
problem with converting the prices of parts, because there are problems with
bank transfers," Alavian said.
Western sanctions have made transferring money overseas or bringing it into the
country a headache for all Syrian businesses.
SANCTIONS
Cut off from many of its former trading partners and from most foreign
investment, Damascus has enthusiastically encouraged business ties with Iran,
helping set up a joint chamber of commerce.
The Syrian and Iranian governments have agreed to set up a joint bank to
facilitate money transfers without triggering Western sanctions, although it is
not clear when it will start or how effective it might be.
Several major projects and economic concessions it has announced have made
little or no apparent progress months later, including a mobile network license,
phosphate mine and oil refinery announced in January 2017.
Meanwhile, Russian companies have already started operations in both the
phosphates and energy sectors, leading to speculation in Iranian media that
Russia is edging it out.
Iranian construction firm Melli Sakhteman, which is also linked to Bonyad
Mostazafan, sees Russian companies as its biggest competitors, its engineering
and construction deputy Majid Rostami said by phone.
"Since Russia has the military upper hand in Syria, then Russian companies who
have better technology and greater financial strength should be able to operate
better in Syria," said Saeed Leylaz, an economist and political analyst in
Tehran.
(Reporting by Angus McDowall and Babak Dehghanpisheh; Editing by Catherine
Evans)
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