Iran Eliminates Key Subsidy For Medicines Amid Economic Hardship
Medications on a pharmacy shelf in Tehran
Iran’s health minister has confirmed that the government has eliminated a major subsidy for medicines, a move some see as a death sentence for many people who cannot afford market prices.
Minister Bahram Einollahi said on Sunday that manufacturers will no longer receive cheap dollars from the government to import raw materials, meaning they should buy dollars at a fivefold higher rate on the exchange market.
The public relations manager prof the ministry said, however, that the change hasn’t been finalized yet and the supply of medicine with cheap dollars is still going on.
Social media users say such a decision would be “an obvious and deliberate act of mass murder!”
Earlier in March, Iran’s parliament decided to scrap an annual subsidy of up to $15 billion for essential food and medicines, despite warnings of more inflationand hardship, but there were speculations that the government would make an exception for medicine.
The idea to eliminate the subsidy emerged after hardliner president Ebrahim Raisi (Raeesi) assumed office in August and could count on backing from conservatives and ultra-conservatives in control of Iran’s parliament.
The subsidy was introduced in April 2018 when former US president Donald Trump signaled his intention to withdraw from the Obama-era nuclear agreement with Iran known as JCPOA, and Iran’s national currency began to nosedive. Prices for imported goods skyrocketed and the government decided to provide cheap dollars to importers of essential goods to keep prices low.
Iran-backed Lebanese militant group Hezbollah has reportedly made a pact with a Russian private paramilitary group to send its forces to fight in Ukraine.
According to Israel Hayom on Sunday, unconfirmed reports from different sources in Saudi Arabia and Lebanon say the Shiite group will send as many as 800 operatives to fight alongside Russian troops in Ukraine, in exchange for Hezbollah getting the green light to buy weapons from Russian defense contractor Almaz-Antey.
The deal was reportedly reached in Latakia between the head of Hezbollah's security unit Naji Hassan al-Shartouni and a Russian official named Alexander Kuznetsov from the Wagner Group -- the de facto private army of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The report cited Lebanon's Sawt Beirut International website as saying that Hezbollah has opened a recruitment office in Al-Qusayr, in western Syria following the meeting between Shartouni and Kuznetsov.
Saudi media outlet Al-Hadath said on Friday that the Iranian proxy group plans to send 200 operatives to Russia, with the rest joining them later, adding that the troops will be paid a monthly wage of $1,500 each.
Earlier in March, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah denied reports that any of its forces are fighting alongside Russians after General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine released a statement saying that around 1,000 fighters from the Iran-backed group and Syria were recruited to fight in Ukraine.
This article is the fifth in a series about Iran’s Shiite clerics, explaining how they study, get a clerical rank, get married and what they do for a living.
In an article meant to warn young women against marrying a cleric, Seyyed Yaser Taqavi, a new-generation Iranian cleric born in 1991, says getting married to a cleric is not as easy some may have seen in Iranian movies.
Everyone in Iran knows that Islam encourages marriage. But still, everyone knows that getting married is one of the most difficult things to do for a variety of financial, cultural and other reasons.
For clerics, however, marriage is one of the few ways of what sociologists call "upward mobility." In a country where nepotism is a prevalent practice, almost every cleric and non-cleric who is in a position of power in Iran owes his position at least partly to kinship.
President Ebrahim Raisi is the son-in-law of Mashhad Friday Prayer Imam Ahmad Alamolhoda. Former Majles Speaker Ali Larijani is the son-in-law of Ayatollah Morteza Motahari. The children and grandchildren of the founder of the Islamic Republic Ruhollah Khomeini are married to the children and grandchildren of other prominent clergymen, such as Ayatollah Soltani in Qom and Ayatollah Khatami in Yazd, most of whom are or were in positions of power.
President Ebrahim Raisi (L) with his father-in-law ayatollah Alamolhoda and Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's eldest son Mostafa is married to the daughter of Ayatollah Khoshvaght and his other son Mojtaba is married to the daughter of former Parliament Speaker Gholamali Haddad. One of his daughters is the daughter-in-law of his chief of staff Mohammad Mohammadi Golpayegani. Almost every minister in every Iranian cabinet was and is somehow linked to a clerical clan. So, getting married to the right family is important for any cleric and vice versa.
Unlike most universities where students pay a tuition fee to study, seminary students receive a monthly stipend (shahriyeh) from their main teacher, usually an influential ayatollah. The money is barely enough to make ends meet, but the amount differs for students at different levels. Married clerics earn more than single clerics and male students get more than female students. Yes! There are female clerics too, but they study atseparate places where no man can see them. Even teachers lecture from behind a curtain and most female clerics have small jobs at the ministry of education.
Currently the best paid clerical students get between 15 to 45 million rials or $60-170 a month. The stipend has increased in recent years due to rising inflation. The total money spent on stipends is massive but there is no definite figure. For instance, according to Hawzah News, there are 7,000 clerical students only in Mazandaran Province, which has no major religious center. The number is nuch higher in Qom or Mashhad.
However, for many seminary students the hardship on living on a stipend is the price to pay for social mobility.
Getting married to someone from a big and influential clerical clan facilitates employment in well-connected entities where clerics and others can get hefty salaries. Choosing the right family may give the young cleric a position of power and its financial windfall.
But finding access to money and power is not the only reason for clerics to look for a spouse from a clerical family. There are also social reasons. Most Iranians resent the political power of the clergy, which makes them unpopular among young women and in some cases their parents.
According to Taqavi, most clerical students get married before completing their seminary studies. Very few of them get married to female seminary students because they can hardly meet them. For most, brides are chosen by their families through an arranged marriage. Generally, according to Taqavi, clerics are said to be good husbands, as they fear God and want to maintain a good social standing.
Taqavi says that some seminarians coming from non-clerical families sometimes find themselves shunned by their families for choosing to become a cleric. In this case, their families are unlikely to help them find a bride. So, they seek help from their teachers and seminary officials to act as go-betweens with the family of the bride to be.
Unlike the customs in ordinary families, the meetings where families ask for the bride's hand are segregated with men and women sitting in separate rooms. However, the couple find a chance to talk privately, of course, while the families listen from behind the door.
There is no music or dance in most clerical wedding ceremonies, although in some cases women, segregated from men, do play music and dance. In rare occasions the guests have been seen enjoying eulogies about the birth of Shi'ite saints.
"Becoming the wife of a cleric will not guarantee that you go to paradise. Even the clerics' own transition to paradise after their death is not guaranteed. But you can be sure that clerics really love their wives," says Taqavi.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is headed to Middle East to attend an Israeli-Arab summit likely to be focused on Iran and Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Blinken, who left Warsaw for Israel on Saturday, said in a tweet“Looking forward to connecting with old friends and deepening ties as we work to build on our wide-ranging partnerships”.
He is also scheduled to visit Morocco and Algeria on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Blinken will meet with Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett on Sunday as well as Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah in the central West Bank.
According to Foreign Minister Yair Lapid's office, Blinken and counterparts from Israel, United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Egypt will hold a "historic meeting" on Sunday and Monday.
On Friday, Jordan’s King Abdullah II hosted Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi, and Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhemi in the Red Sea port city of Aqaba for a “consultative brotherly meeting dealt with recent international and regional developments”.
Leaders of Egypt, Israel and the United Arab Emirates also met on March 22in the Egyptian resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh.
Except a mention of the Ukraine crisis and Iran, there is little information about what were discussed in all these meetings before Blinken arrival in the region but it could be part of efforts to present a united regional front on Iran issues.
The Saudi-led coalition set a three-hour deadline for the Iran-backed Houthis to withdraw weapons from the airport of Sanaa and two ports on the Red Sea.
Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya TV reported on Saturday that retaining weapons in the Yemeni capital's airport and the ports of Hodeidah and Saleef would "end their status" as safe regions not to be targeted by coalition air strikes. The coalition’s statement also called on Houthis to “remove weapons from protected sites” but did not say exactly at what time the deadline would expire.
According to the official Saudi Press Agency on Saturday, the coalition has destroyed four explosive-laden boats in Hodeidah and Saleef ports in a targeted strike. The weaponized boats were still being built by the Houthis and their destruction thwarted “imminent attack on oil tankers”.
On Friday, the Arab Coalition announced the start of a new round of airstrikes on Houthi positions in retaliation for their attacks on oil facilities in Saudi Arabia, which drew widespread condemnations, including from Washington that blamed Iran for supplying weapons to the Houthis.
Republican Senator James Risch twitted on Friday that “As the Biden Admin telegraphs removing the IRGC terrorist designation, Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen attack our Gulf partners with impunity. The administration is dangerously naïve to continue pursuing a bad deal with Iran”.
As Yemen’s Houthi rebels attacked Saudi oil facilities, Iran claimed it had increased its oil output potential to 3.8 million bpd amid a surge in energy prices.
The Iranian oil ministry's public relations on Friday said Iran's capacity for drilling and extracting oil has now surpassed the level before sanctions were imposed by the United States in 2018 and reached 3.8 million barrels per day.
Crude oil prices surged to over $120 per barrel after Friday's Houthi attack and again, following Saudi retaliatory strikes on Saturday. World energy prices have surges after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Saudi oil is seen as crucial to fill any void in case of more sanctions against Moscow.
Saudi Arabia has said that it will not be held responsible for any global shortage of oil resulting from Houthi's Friday attack on its Aramco facilities by Iran-aligned Houthi rebels of Yemen.
The Houthi attacks on Friday were carried out ahead of the 7th anniversary of a Saudi-led coalition's military intervention against the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen. Two large oil reservoirs in Jedda caught fire in the attacks and were burning until midday Saturday.
Iranian officials have not commented directly on the Houthi attack but state-run media say Houthis have "defeated" Saudi Arabia. "The national army and Ansarallah have the upper hand now. They strike any target in Saudi Arabia with their missiles and drones despite being named the weakest Arab army in 2015 when the war started," the official news agency IRNA wrote Saturday.
On Friday Tehran Municipality beamed images of Houthis leadersHussein Badreddin al-Houthi and its current leader Abdul-Malik Badruldin al-Houthi on the Azadi monument in Tehran. The 3-D video-mapping presumably marked the 7th anniversary of the war in Yemen which the Houthis have designated as the National Steadfastness Day.
The Saudi-led coalition on Saturday unleashed a barrage of overnight airstrikes on the Yemeni capital Sanaa and Hodeida, a strategic Red Sea city in retaliation for the Houthi attack on Aramco oil depot in Jiddah on Friday.
According to the state-run Saudi Press Agency, a spokesman for the Saudi-led coalition, Turki al-Malki, said on Saturday that the strikes aim to "protect global energy sources and ensure supply chains" and that the operation would continue until it achieves its goals. The operation was in its early stages and Iran-aligned Houthis should bear the consequences of their "hostile behavior", he said.
The coalition said it intercepted and destroyed two more bomb-laden drones on Saturday.
Riyadh on Saturday also requested a UN Security Council meeting to condemn the Houthi attacks. In a message to the council, the Saudi mission said the country reserves the right to take all measures to defend its territory.
Saudi Arabia accuses the Houthi militia of targeting its energy facilities and civilian areas with drones and ballistic missiles provided by Iran while the Houthis claim it is the Saudi-led coalition that carries out air strikes against Yemeni civilians in areas under its control.
Houthis have launched dozens of cross-border attacks on Saudi Arabia since September 2021.
Friday's attacks were strongly condemned by the United States, its European allies and others.
US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan in a statementon Friday said the United States condemns the Houthi attacks and accused Iran of arms shipments to Houthis. “Today’s attacks…were clearly enabled by Iran in violation of UN Security Council resolutions prohibiting the import of weapons into Yemen.”