Iran police clash with protesters over currency crisis

Source: BBC

Riot police in Iran have clashed with protesters in the capital over sharp falls in the currency, the rial.

Tear gas was used to disperse the demonstrators, some of whom were setting fire to tyres and rubbish bins. There were many arrests, reports say.

Eyewitnesses told the BBC that scores of people gathered outside the central bank, calling for the governor to stand down, chanting anti-government slogans.

The rial has plummeted to record lows against the US dollar in recent days.

Money dealers were joined by traders from the nearby central bazaar, reports say.

Amateur video footage posted online appeared to show hundreds of people marching towards Iran’s central bank.

Eyewitnesses told BBC Persian that riot police fired tear gas to disperse the crowds.

Reports say many shops in the central Grand Bazaar have brought down their shutters in sympathy with the demonstrators.

Traders are angry at the lack of direction from the government in the crisis, which they say has led to more instability in prices and made trading almost impossible, according to commentators.

Viewers of BBC Persian television in Iran reported that authorities began jamming the channel’s signals on two satellites after the London-based Persian-language channel reported the Tehran protests.

The head of Tehran’s bazaar unions, Ahmad Karimi-Esfahani, said shopkeepers had not opened their businesses as they were “worried about security” but he expected them to reopen on Thursday.

A protest outside the bazaar started with a small group and then grew, he told the Iranian Labour News Agency (Ilna).

One eyewitness, who gave his name only as Omid, told the BBC that the Sabze Maydon area within the bazaar was closed down and some shop windows were smashed.

Iranian media reaction

The conservative daily, Khorasan, asked: “Mr Ahmadinejad, are you the country’s president?” It said the president had failed at a news conference on Tuesday to say “what ‘programmes’ and ‘new plans’ the government has to resolve the situation”.

The reformist newspaper, Etemad, carried an editorial headlined “Why can’t you?” saying that “once again Ahmadinejad took no responsibility for the chaotic situation”.

The conservative news website, Baztab-e Emruz, pointed to the negative impact of the president’s remarks on the decline in the rial’s exchange rate. “An hour after Ahmadinejad’s news conference… the rate of the dollar, which had reduced to 3,200 tomans [32,000 rials approx] in the afternoon, increased to 3,550 again,” it said.

The moderate Mardom Salari noted the “contradictory views” of Majlis Speaker Ali Larijani on the instability of the exchange rate. On Tuesday Mr Larijani told the Fars news agency: “Eighty percent of our economic issues and problems are related to the system of management.”

Source: BBC Monitoring

He said the government had closed the currency exchange shops, hoping to curtail the turmoil.

A senior Iranian police commander confirmed to Ilna that “a limited number of people protested in front of the bazaar,” but he said the bazaar was not closed.

Hundreds of police are also reported to have rounded up and arrested illegal money changers in the capital.

Tehran’s bazaar is traditionally the biggest financial ally of the Iranian regime. The bazaar is said to have bankrolled the 1979 Islamic revolution.

The political core of the bazaar is the Islamic Allied Society or Motalefeh, a political group loyal to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The protests were clearly targeting President Ahmadinejad’s government, accusing it of mismanagement and inefficiency in curtailing Iran’s currency crisis, says BBC Persian’s Amir Paivar.

President Ahmadinejad has blamed Western sanctions for the fall in the rial, saying they amounted to an economic war.

However, many Iranians accuse him of financial mismanagement.

US officials say the slide reflects the success of US economic sanctions targeted at Iran’s controversial nuclear programme.

Meanwhile, Ayatollah Khamenei said in a speech that the Iranian people would never submit to pressure from abroad.

Iran would put this crisis behind it, he was quoted by Iranian news agencies as saying.

Related:

30 country coalition makes final statements signaling peaceable consensus to Syrian crisis, West be damned!

Source: Syria 360

Officials and representatives from over 30 countries participating in the international summit in Tehran on August 09, 2012.

TEHRAN (FNA)- Delegates of 30 world countries and international bodies participating in the International Conference on Syria in the Iranian capital issued a final statement at the end of their meeting Thursday evening.

The international consultative conference on the developments in Syria started in Tehran this afternoon and wrapped up work after several hours of discussions in the evening.

The following is the full text of the statement issued at the end of the gathering.

In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful

Statement of the Chairman of Tehran Consultative Meeting on Syria

Tehran – August 9, 2012

Tehran Consultative Meeting on Syria was convened on August 9, 2012, to strengthen all-out regional and international efforts to help Syrian people to find a way out of ongoing crisis and prepare a suitable ground for national dialogue in a peaceful atmosphere. The meeting which was headed by His Excellency Dr. Salehi, the esteemed Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran, and participated by ministers and delegates from Afghanistan, Algeria, Armenia, Belarus, Benin, China, Cuba, Ecuador, Georgia, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Kirghizstan, Maldives, Nicaragua, Oman, Pakistan, Russia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Tajikistan, Tunisia, Turkmenistan, Venezuela, Zimbabwe, and the United Nations, made the following recommendations:

- Expressing serious concern over the continuation of clashes and violation of human rights in Syria and the vast losses and damages which have caused grief and numerous problems for the people of Syria, and expressing sympathy with the family of the victims of armed clashes and terrorist acts.

- Emphasizing the necessity of pursuing political solutions based on national dialogue as the only way to resolve the Syrian crisis with the main objective of bringing the violence to a total end and encouraging the two sides to prepare the ground for the national dialogue.

- Expressing support to the legitimate demands of the Syrian people to carry out reforms in order to build democracy and promote all-out political partnership of different parties and opposition groups to exercise their right to run their own country, in a peaceful manner and calm atmosphere and without any foreign intervention.

- Expressing welcome and support to all good offices made already in line with the principles of good intentions and impartiality to settle the Syrian crisis and appreciating the efforts made by the Secretary General of the UN and his special envoy Mr. Kofi Annan for his 6-point plan as well as putting emphasis on continuation of the activities of the international observers to consolidate sustainable peace and tranquility in Syria.

- Emphasizing the need to uphold the principles of international law regarding non-intervention in domestic affairs of other countries and the respect of their national sovereignty and territorial integrity, and urging to cease the hostilities by putting an end to any military assistance to armed groups and warning of the dangerous impacts of support for armed groups on regional peace and security.

- Emphasizing the necessity to deliver humanitarian assistance to the people of Syria in order to mitigate the plight of Syrian people in cooperation with the government of Syria.

- Emphasizing the necessity to examine establishing of a contact group from among the participating countries aiming to end the violence and starting the inclusive dialogue between the Syrian government and the opposition.

- Expressing serious concern over the entry of known terrorist groups and sects into the Syrian conflict and seriously warning of the spread of terrorism and its dire consequences on the peace and security of the region.

- Welcoming the proposal of the Islamic Republic of Iran for calling upon the conflicting parties to end clashes and violence for three months on the occasion of the arrival of Eid al- Fitr which is one of the most important festivity for all Muslims of the world to stop hostilities in Syria in order to follow up negotiations and adopt peaceful mechanisms.

Two earthquakes in Iran kill 250 and injure 2,000

Source: Reuters

Overcrowded hospitals in north-west Iran struggled to cope with thousands of earthquake victims on Sunday and rescuers raced to reach remote villages after two powerful quakes killed at least 250 people.

image

Thousands of people huddled in makeshift camps or slept in streets after Saturday’s quakes in fear of more aftershocks, 40 of which had already struck. A lack of tents and other supplies left them exposed to the night chill, one witness told Reuters.

Casualty figures are expected to rise, officials said, as some of the injured were in critical condition while hundreds were trapped under rubble, inaccessible to rescue workers hampered by darkness in the first hours after the quakes.

“I saw some people whose entire home was destroyed, and all their livestock killed,” Tahir Sadati, a local photographer, said by telephone. “People need help, they need warm clothes, more tents, blankets and bread.”

The worst damage and most casualties appeared to have been in rural villages surrounding the towns of Ahar, Varzaghan and Harees, near the major city of Tabriz, Iranian media reported.

Many villages are hard to reach by road, hindering rescue efforts. Hospitals in Tabriz, Ardabil and other cities nearby took in many of the injured, residents and Iranian media said, and there were long queues of survivors waiting to be treated.

Aidin, a Tabriz resident, said he went to give blood at a local hospital on Saturday and saw staff struggling to cope with the influx of patients. Most patients had been taken there by their families, he said, indicating a shortage of ambulances.

Ahar’s 120-bed hospital was full, said Arash, a college student and resident of the town. There were traffic jams on the narrow road between Ahar and Tabriz as victims tried to reach hospitals, he said by telephone.

VILLAGES DESTROYED

“People are scared and won’t go back into their houses because they fear the buildings aren’t safe.”

The U.S. Geological Survey measured Saturday’s first quake at 6.4 magnitude and said it struck 60 km (37 miles) north-east of the city of Tabriz, a trading hub far from Iran’s oil-producing areas and known nuclear facilities.

The second, measuring 6.3, struck 11 minutes later near Varzaghan, 49 km (30 miles) northeast of Tabriz.

Twelve villages were destroyed and about 60 had more than 50 percent damage in the quakes, Iranian media reported. About 110 villages were damaged, Deputy Interior Minister Hassan Ghadami told Fars news agency.

Ghadami said 250 people had been killed and Red Crescent spokesman Hossein Derakhshan told Fars more than 2,000 people were believed to have been injured.

“We saw some villages that were truly destroyed,” said Sadati, who visited the affected area to document the aftermath. “One good thing was that the earthquake happened during the day, so many people were not in their homes. If it had happened at night the casualties would have been far worse.”

Seventy-one ambulances and 40 units trained to find survivors had been deployed to the affected areas along with more than 5,000 tents, Derakhshan said.

About 16,000 people in the quake-hit area have been given emergency shelter, Red Crescent official Mahmoud Mozafar told Mehr news agency.

Iranian lawmaker Mohammad Hassan-Nejad warned that if relief efforts did not speed up, the death toll would swiftly rise.

“Relief groups have still not reached many villages, because in normal conditions some of these villages are several hours away,” he told the Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA). “Currently the roads are closed and the only way to reach these villages is by air.”

COLLAPSED BUILDINGS

Another lawmaker, Abbas Falahi, told Fars rescue workers had not yet been able to reach between 10 and 20 villages.

Photographs posted on Iranian news websites showed numerous bodies, including children, lying on the floor of a white-tiled morgue in Ahar and medical staff treating the injured in the open air as dusk fell. Other images showed rescue workers digging people out of rubble – some alive, many dead.

Iran is situated on major fault lines and has suffered several devastating earthquakes in recent years, including a 6.6 magnitude quake in 2003 that reduced the historic south-eastern city of Bam to dust and killed about 31,000 people.

Saturday’s quakes struck in East Azerbaijan province, a mountainous region that neighbors Azerbaijan and Armenia to the north. Buildings in Tabriz, the provincial capital, are substantially built and ISNA reported nobody in the city had been killed or hurt.

Homes and business premises in Iranian villages, however, are often made of concrete blocks or mud brick that can crumble and collapse in a strong quake.

Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad-Najjar has arrived in the area and was holding meetings with local officials to coordinate the emergency response, ISNA reported. Thirty groups of experts have been sent to villages to estimate damage and help residents, a housing official told state news agency IRNA.

Water, electricity, and phone lines in the area of Varzaghan are all down, further hindering rescue efforts, Iran’s English-language Press TV reported.

Tabriz residents left their homes and crowded the streets following the two quakes, those in the city said. “Everyone was scared last night,” a resident said by telephone. “They set up tents and were sleeping in the streets and in parks.”

(Additional reporting by Marcus George and Zahra Hossenian; Writing by Andrew Torchia and Marcus George Editing by Pravin Char)

Confirmed: 2012 will be seen as the end of the the US Dollar as we know it

Being human is something one must practice to be good at.  To me part of being human is finding a world view that resonates with your higher self.  For me this manifests in a desire to understand systems, find patterns in the world, and self discovery.  Never would I have imagined 5 years ago the intellectual revolution my mind would undergo as a side effect of asking the simple question, “what is a dollar?”  In many ways, this question has brought me to a new understanding of myself, the planet earth and even reality itself.  Opening my mind to the esoteric world of high finance has taught me so much about political history, world history, the origins of man as well as the nature of commerce, freedom and private property.  In many ways this blog is an honor  to write because I feel that I become a conduit through which important information flows.  Even in my own small way, I believe I am channeling important information into a digestible format so that those who want to learn, can.   Though I get no pleasure out of being right about negative things, I feel I must mention those instances when I can because in the world of conspiracies corroboration, reliability, and fact checking are of utmost importance.

According to Jim Sinclair and Lindsey Graham, the U.S. Dollar is finished.  This mirrors my thoughts from an article written earlier this year entitled, “2012: The Fall of the US Dollar Hegemony,” which cites numerous geopolitical and economic developments signalling the end of the Dollar as the world reserve currency.  Among them being Iran’s decision to trade oil in Gold, Hugo Chavez repatriating his country’s gold, China and Russia’s international currency agreementU.S. financial sanctions on Iran, India and Japananese swap agreements, India and Iran settling in Rupees, and more!  The writing is on the wall, but now we are getting very confident declarations of “the end” by some of the world’s smartest prophets.

Jim Sinclair writes, “The supremacy of the US Dollar is Behind us“:

Dear CIGAs,

Brazil, Russia, India China and South Africa are meeting next week because of the use of SWIFT as a weapon of war. Expect the formation of a competitive SWIFT system in three blocks. The dollar will test .7200 USDX and fail on the third tap.

I have been doubted on many things, much of which has come to fruition. There was a time when $1650 in gold was considered the ludicrous dream of a madman.

2012 is the year that the US dollar will suffer from a significant drop in utilization as the international settlement currency. The utilization of the SWIFT system as a means of making war is the singular greatest mistake dollar managers have ever made.

Lindsey Graham says “2012 is the end of the Dollar”: