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In Iran, morale fragile as nuclear talks stumble

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For Amir Moghtader the waiting has become a torment. Uncertainty is the cause, but as the clock ticks down he still hopes there can be a nuclear deal for Iran.

"I don't know what the solution is, but the government should find it and it should benefit both sides," he says, parked at Argentine Square, a busy intersection for workers entering and leaving central Tehran.

The 52-year-old taxi driver, like all Iranians, has become accustomed to waiting. But while diplomats bargain abroad over terms that could end a 13-year crisis over the Islamic republic's nuclear programme, minds are filled with doubt and fear about the eventual outcome.

A pre-emptive announcement at talks in Vienna that a third deadline for a deal is likely to be missed on Tuesday has only added to the uncertainty.

Moghtader is tired of the struggle. He may not be in oil or finance, the two biggest industries affected by Western sanctions on Iran, but the economic fallout has hit him all the same.

US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) and US Under Secretary for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman m...
US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) and US Under Secretary for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman meet with EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini (unseen) in Vienna on June 28, 2015 as part of talks over Iran's nuclear programme
Carlos Barria, Pool/AFP

"If I have to buy a spare part for my car, I have to pay the equivalent price in dollars, but what I get from my customers is rials," he says, alluding to inflation that has seen Iran's currency shed two thirds of its value since 2011, when the nuclear crisis began to engulf the economy.

"We are all under pressure. I hope there can be a deal."

Despite agreeing the outlines of an agreement on April 2, the final talks between Iran and six powers led by the United States on turning it into a binding accord have hit difficulties.

A deal would lift sanctions, paving the way for foreign investment to flow back, in exchange for curbs on Iran's nuclear activities.

But an insistence from the West for access and inspections at nuclear and military sites, to verify that Iran's nuclear activities are peaceful, seems to have thrown an agreement into jeopardy again.

US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) shakes hands with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Za...
US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) shakes hands with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif ahead of 2014 nuclear talks in Vienna
Ronald Zak, Pool/AFP/File

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, just four days before the current talks started, ruled military inspections out.

And days later Iran's lead negotiator in the talks said some of the world powers had changed their positions on what was agreed in April, by recently making new demands.

- Fears for oil sector -

Brinkmanship at a crunch point in negotiations is just politics to Ahmad Asgari, an oil and gas consultant, but the final outcome is pivotal.

A deal could bring a step change to his industry. Failure in the talks could finish him.

"My fear is that if there is no deal my company will shut down," he says. "We cannot endure this situation anymore. I have spent all my savings."

Having once employed 100 people, only 20 remain on the payroll at the Association of Petroleum Industry Engineering and Construction Companies (APEC), where Asgari is managing director.

He says sanctions have meant very few projects in the past eight years, with the most recent restrictions on banking in 2012 drying up finance and cashflow and hindering imports of vital equipment.

"Iran has huge gas reserves in the south but we can't develop them and take advantage," says Asgari.

"But if the embargo is removed, the experts we need will come back, we will receive funds and we will create jobs and perhaps persuade our youth that they do not need to emigrate."

The economic divide in Iran -- a decade-long boom from the early 1990s bolstered the middle class but is now a distant memory -- has widened as sanctions have hit home.

Jahangir Raafat is one of the more fortunate, riding out hard times.

An oncologist, he can afford to educate his children abroad, and with a full waiting room of 30 patients, business has never dwindled.

"Everybody wants the sanctions removed, things would get better," he says. "But we can manage if there is no deal. Of course, bright young people will still want to leave. We can't stop them."

For Amir Moghtader the waiting has become a torment. Uncertainty is the cause, but as the clock ticks down he still hopes there can be a nuclear deal for Iran.

“I don’t know what the solution is, but the government should find it and it should benefit both sides,” he says, parked at Argentine Square, a busy intersection for workers entering and leaving central Tehran.

The 52-year-old taxi driver, like all Iranians, has become accustomed to waiting. But while diplomats bargain abroad over terms that could end a 13-year crisis over the Islamic republic’s nuclear programme, minds are filled with doubt and fear about the eventual outcome.

A pre-emptive announcement at talks in Vienna that a third deadline for a deal is likely to be missed on Tuesday has only added to the uncertainty.

Moghtader is tired of the struggle. He may not be in oil or finance, the two biggest industries affected by Western sanctions on Iran, but the economic fallout has hit him all the same.

US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) and US Under Secretary for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman m...

US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) and US Under Secretary for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman meet with EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini (unseen) in Vienna on June 28, 2015 as part of talks over Iran's nuclear programme
Carlos Barria, Pool/AFP

“If I have to buy a spare part for my car, I have to pay the equivalent price in dollars, but what I get from my customers is rials,” he says, alluding to inflation that has seen Iran’s currency shed two thirds of its value since 2011, when the nuclear crisis began to engulf the economy.

“We are all under pressure. I hope there can be a deal.”

Despite agreeing the outlines of an agreement on April 2, the final talks between Iran and six powers led by the United States on turning it into a binding accord have hit difficulties.

A deal would lift sanctions, paving the way for foreign investment to flow back, in exchange for curbs on Iran’s nuclear activities.

But an insistence from the West for access and inspections at nuclear and military sites, to verify that Iran’s nuclear activities are peaceful, seems to have thrown an agreement into jeopardy again.

US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) shakes hands with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Za...

US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) shakes hands with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif ahead of 2014 nuclear talks in Vienna
Ronald Zak, Pool/AFP/File

Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, just four days before the current talks started, ruled military inspections out.

And days later Iran’s lead negotiator in the talks said some of the world powers had changed their positions on what was agreed in April, by recently making new demands.

– Fears for oil sector –

Brinkmanship at a crunch point in negotiations is just politics to Ahmad Asgari, an oil and gas consultant, but the final outcome is pivotal.

A deal could bring a step change to his industry. Failure in the talks could finish him.

“My fear is that if there is no deal my company will shut down,” he says. “We cannot endure this situation anymore. I have spent all my savings.”

Having once employed 100 people, only 20 remain on the payroll at the Association of Petroleum Industry Engineering and Construction Companies (APEC), where Asgari is managing director.

He says sanctions have meant very few projects in the past eight years, with the most recent restrictions on banking in 2012 drying up finance and cashflow and hindering imports of vital equipment.

“Iran has huge gas reserves in the south but we can’t develop them and take advantage,” says Asgari.

“But if the embargo is removed, the experts we need will come back, we will receive funds and we will create jobs and perhaps persuade our youth that they do not need to emigrate.”

The economic divide in Iran — a decade-long boom from the early 1990s bolstered the middle class but is now a distant memory — has widened as sanctions have hit home.

Jahangir Raafat is one of the more fortunate, riding out hard times.

An oncologist, he can afford to educate his children abroad, and with a full waiting room of 30 patients, business has never dwindled.

“Everybody wants the sanctions removed, things would get better,” he says. “But we can manage if there is no deal. Of course, bright young people will still want to leave. We can’t stop them.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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