Iranian currency falls to record low amid isolation and sanctions

Published January 22, 2023
Protesters hold placards at a march in central London on Jan 21 against the Islamic revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), as protests against the Iranian regime continue. — AFP
Protesters hold placards at a march in central London on Jan 21 against the Islamic revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), as protests against the Iranian regime continue. — AFP

DUBAI: Iran’s troubled currency fell to a record low against the US dollar on Saturday amid the country’s increasing isolation and possible European Union sanctions against Tehran’s Revolutionary Guards or some of its members.

Ties between the EU and Tehran have deteriorated in recent months as efforts to revive nuclear talks have stalled. Iran has detained several European nationals and the bloc has become increasingly critical of the violent treatment of protesters and the use of executions.

The EU is discussing a fourth round of sanctions against Iran and diplomatic sources have said members of the Revolutionary Guards will be added to the bloc’s sanctions list next week. But some EU member states want to go further and classify the Guards as a whole as a terrorist organisation.

The dollar was selling for as much as 447,000 rials on Iran’s unofficial market on Saturday, compared with 430,500 the previous day, according to the foreign exchange site Bonbast.com.

The rial has lost 29 per cent of its value since nationwide protests following the death in police custody of a 22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman, Mahsa Amini, on Sept 16.

The unrest has posed one of the biggest challenges to the theocratic rule in Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

The economic Ecoiran website blamed the continued fall of the rial on an apparent “global consensus” against Iran.

The European Parliament called on Wednes­day for the EU to list Iran’s Guards as a terrorist group, blaming the powerful force for the repression of protesters and the supply of drones to Russia. The assembly cannot compel the EU to add the force to its list but the text was a clear political message to Tehran.

Published in Dawn, January 22nd, 2023

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