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Iran’s Regime Committed Huge Mistakes in Its Nuclear Case

At the beginning of the work of Iran’s new government, the regime’s official thought for a while about the restart of the nuclear negotiations with world powers, finally despite their previous claims that the new government will not continue the negotiation in such a situation they accepted to restart them, and they announced a new date for the start of the seventh round of the nuclear negotiations.

The first announced that the US government should free the regime’s blocked $10 billion in assets, as a sign of good faith. But this did not happen, and the US government has not accepted it as of yet.

The regime’s president Ebrahim Raisi frustrated asked that if only the US government lift the sanctions, they will accept new negotiations. But now it has become crystal clear for Tehran that there is no other way than the seventh round of the negotiations.

In addition to the US government’s reaction, some European governments such a France and Germany have said that the negotiations must continue from that point where they have been stopped and new point for the negotiation is not accepted something that increases the regime’s frustration while counting of the Europeans to take its back while confronting with the US.

Now the negotiations will start on November 29. And this time the regime must satisfy the other parties of the negotiations or else as the Stater-run daily Arman-e-Meli on November 20, 2021, wrote:

“We must take care of the security circles around the country. Recently, the Zionist regime has been trying to form a regional and international coalition against our country (regime). These threats should not be ignored. It should not be taken lightly, but it can be very serious. A front is forming in the region with four main members: Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Israel, and Egypt.

“The Prime Minister of the Zionist regime has announced that the anti-Iranian alliance in the region will take a stronger shape. This front can be dangerous and a threat to us. Negotiations must begin peacefully.

“No country, neither China nor Russia, will be able to save our economy. We must try to lift the sanctions. The way out of the internal pressures and the heavy (bad) economic situation is to get rid of the issue of sanctions and it will be solved with the JCPOA.”

However, even in the best-case scenario, Iran’s regime will still remain an isolated government because the reason why the regime has stopped the negotiations is not because of its nuclear case but of the new demands like the regime’s human rights, missile, and regional cases. This is something that the regime is not able to obey as the path it has taken over the last 43 years has shown.

Therefore, “in Washington they are speaking about the implementation of Plan B against Iran. But for Iran, Plan B is like Plan A.” (Diplomacy Irani, November 9, 2021)

The question is why is the regime’s government is feeling something like this?

Because “17 Republican congressmen wrote a letter to Biden asking him to stop negotiations with Iran! Among the signatories of this letter, the names of several anti-Iranian representatives can be seen, including Bryan Steil. Some foreign policy experts believe this letter is a sign that any possible agreement with the West in the future will be written on the flowing sand and after the end of the Biden government, the next president can easily abandon the new agreement, like the 2015 agreement, with a simple signature.” (State-run daily Mashregh, November 12, 2021)

The Iranian government knows very that the new JCPOA negotiations have a specified direction that does not favor the regime and the regime will lose its nuclear lever without any benefits even economic as many of its so-called reformist elements were advertising. This is something that happened in the 2015 negotiations.

The regime made a huge mistake by investing in tactical steps which were not in its favor, which indicates its stagnation and disappointment.

  1. Wrong investment on the result of the US election.
  2. The regime did not understand or was late in understanding that the US government is not interested in the regime’s gain of success and economic benefits. For that, the regime now is auctioning the country’s wealth to compensate for this loss.
  3. Playing with the liftable and unliftable sanctions was the next mistake because most of the sanctions are due to the regime’s other cases like terrorism, human rights violations, and missile projects.

Now the regime is in such a situation that “any agreement is better than no agreement.”

Iranian Diplomat Charged With Assassination of a Publisher in Norway

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A former senior Iranian diplomat based in Oslo, Norway, and a Lebanese national is at the center of accusations of being involved in the assassination of Norwegian publisher, William Nygaard. According to the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK), the Norwegian National Criminal Investigation Service (Kripos) has been investigating the case since 2009.

Nygaard, who was the former head of the publishing company Aschehoug and the former chairman of the NRK, was responsible for publishing the Norwegian edition of Salman Rushdie’s controversial novel, The Satanic Verses.

Based on a fatwa by Ruhollah Khomeini, the Iranian regime’s founder and first Supreme Leader, against Salman Rushdie, Nygaard was targeted in 1993 by several fanatics for publishing Rushdie’s novel.

Tehran’s first Secretary at the Iranian regime’s Embassy in Oslo, unidentified by the NRK, and Lebanese national, Khaled Moussawi, who lived in Oslo during the 1990s, are the main suspects in Nygaard’s assassination. Tehran’s diplomat reportedly visited Norway just after Rushdie’s book was published but left the country four days before the assassination.

This wasn’t the first time that the Iranian regime’s embassy in Oslo has been involved with terrorism and espionage. Three years ago, Mohammad Davoudzadeh Lului was arrested by Swedish authorities for his affiliation with the regime’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS).

Davoudzadeh was involved in a terrorist plot against Iranian Arab citizens in Denmark. Davoudzadeh had obtained refugee status and later Norwegian citizenship and was in regular communication with the regime’s embassy in Oslo and then-ambassador Mohammad Hassan Habibolahzadeh.

In September 2021, it was reported in Swedish newspapers that former Swedish security police chief, Peyman Kia had been arrested and charged with spying on Iran’s behalf between 2011 and 2015. Having obtained Swedish citizenship, he worked as a director for the Swedish Security Police (SPO), and as an analyst for the Swedish military whilst spying on behalf of the regime and relaying information back to them.

Another spy case came to light in August when an Iranian couple was also arrested in Sweden after obtaining refugee status in the country using false Afghan identification documents.

Recent arrests of the Iranian spies suggest that Tehran has a vast network of terrorism and espionage in Europe. During the trial of Assadollah Assadi, an Iranian diplomat, in Belgium, it was revealed that he oversaw Iran’s network of terrorism in Europe.

Assadi, along with three accomplices, who had gained Belgian citizenship, were attempting to bomb the Iranian opposition’s rally in France in 2018. Assadi was arrested in Germany as he tried to get back to Austria where he served as the third secretary in the regime’s embassy in Vienna. German authorities discovered a notebook in Assadi’s car detailing the bomb plot, travel plans, and money he had paid to various operatives.

The regime has used its diplomatic privileges to spread terrorism in Europe. The regime’s agents have been able to settle down in the European countries, acquire citizenship. They are Tehran’s sleeper cells.

Despite Europe being in danger of the regime’s terrorist activities, EU leaders continue to converse with regime officials with policies of appeasement. While the arrest, trial, and convictions of Assadi and his co-conspirators are a step in the right direction, these actions are not enough to fully dismantle the regime’s terrorism network in Europe. Yet, European leaders have been reluctant to punish the regime for its terrorist activities.

Closing the regime’s embassies, expelling its so-called diplomats, identifying, and expelling the regime’s agents in Europe who operate while holding dual nationalities or refugee status are as necessary as they are delayed. This would not only end the regime’s threats against Iranian dissidents abroad, but it would also certainly add to the European citizen’s security.

Tribunals against Criminals in Iran

“What goes around, comes around” is the best expression to describe what happens regarding the authoritarian regime in Iran today. In the past 42 years, the ayatollahs have done “whatever it takes” to hold onto power.

Since 1979, they mercilessly suppressed freedom-loving individuals and entities, human rights defenders, ethnic and religious minorities, and even peaceful protesters on the tarmac. During the 1980s, they committed enormous crimes against dissidents, including the extrajudicial executions of 30,000 political prisoners in the summer of 1988.

The mass killing of dissidents, which is known as the 1988 massacre, is one of the most prominent crimes in Iran’s history. Numerous prominent rights defenders and international law experts believe that the perpetrators of the crime should be held accountable for crimes against humanity.

“The execution of imprisoned opponents, including those who had already been tried and were serving their prison terms, was the biggest massacre of political prisoners since World War II,” Baroness Boothroyd, the former Speaker of the House of Commons pointed out at the call for justice summit on July 19.

Swedish Judges Decide to Transfer Hamid Noury’s Trial to Albania

These days, one of the massacre executioners Hamid Noury is being brought to justice by Swedish authorities in Stockholm. He was detained in November 2019 due to his role in the 1988 crime. At the time, he was an interrogator in the notorious prison of Gohardasht, in the northwest of the capital Tehran.

In July 1988, Islamic Republic founder Ruhollah Khomeini issued a fatwa, ordering judicial authorities to immediately purge prisons from political prisoners, particularly those who insisted on supporting the main opposition Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK).

“It is decreed that those who are in prison throughout the country and remain steadfast in their support for the [MEK] are waging war on God and are condemned to execution,” read Khomeini’s fatwa.

In this context, Swedish judges decided to transfer the court to the coastal city of Durrës in the west of Albania to hear former political prisoners’ testimonies. The judges were convinced that these testimonies would shed light on bleak parts of this case.

During the 35th to 37th sessions of Hamid Noury’s trial in Durrës, MEK members Mohammad Zand, Majid Saheb-Jam, and Asghar Mehdizadeh testified and recounted horrible truth about the 1988 massacre. They mentioned the role of Hamid Noury in the crime, and they shared their experiences about the regime’s atrocities in Gohardasht Prison.

The court is supposed to continue for several other days to hear more testimonies provided by the 1988 massacre survivors affiliated with the MEK.

Aban People’s Tribunal in London

Furthermore, thanks to an initiative by human rights activists and organizations, including The World Coalition Against the Death Penalty (WCADP), Iran Human Rights (IHR NGO), and Justice for Iran, the People’s Tribunal of Aban (November) was held in London.

During the tribunal presided by Judge Zak Yaccob, a prominent anti-apartheid activist from South Africa, hundreds of witnesses and families of victims gave their testimonies. According to dissidents and an exclusive report by Reuters, Iranian authorities murdered at least 1,500 protesters within two days.

Aban Tribunal is a significant point to hold criminal authorities in Iran, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, President Ebrahim Raisi, then-President Hassan Rouhani, then-Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli, Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Commander-in-Chief Hossein Salami, and hundreds of other intelligence and security officials to account.

Historic testimonies and details provided by witnesses should be considered as a call on the international community for prosecuting criminal officials in Iran. “People’s tribunal on deadly protest crackdowns must serve as a wake-up call for all UN member states,” said Raha Bahreini, an Amnesty International’s Iran Researcher and a human rights lawyer.

Iran: Widespread Corruption, Fake Diplomas, Ph.Ds. Sold at $9000

Inside the Iranian government, because of the centralization of the resources of the economic, financial, and armed forces which are under the control of the ruling circle, corruption is expanded and unbridled.

In this government, every subject we are pointing to is involved with corruption and is much bigger than we could imagine. And the state-run media is just revealing just a small part of it. Because most corruption cases and the biggest financial vortexes are belonging to the regime’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei’s office and house.

This is something that the state-run daily Kilid experienced while losing its certification after printing an image of Khamenei’s hand which was drawing the poverty line with an article entitled: ‘Millions of households under the poverty line.’

Therefore no one in this regime can speak about the real source of corruption without facing the consequences, Iran watchers say.

Corruption in the issuing degrees of education

One might think that it is a hard and illegal thing to search and find centers that are issuing a degree for a ministry or bachelor or a Ph.D. But in Iran, that is not the case and without much effort, one can find centers that are operating officially, and most of them are even under the control of the government.

The official slogan of most of them is ‘we will fulfill your wish’ or ‘with this degree we hope that you will be able to upgrade your job position.’

They ask, ‘do you have enough time to continue your education? Are you searching for a degree of education?’

These institutions claim officially that they can provide any degree, the customer only needs to choose the field. They even present some of their works to the customers on their websites.

This action hurts society and upends social values and norms. There will be no more effort for learning and the country will face a lack of real specialists. Society will become a structure without any basement.

The Mostaghel newspaper on November 2, 2021, in an article in this regard, wrote: ‘Advertisements for the sale of education degrees are also freely available on social networks.’

Sale of all education degrees by an official inquiry

  • Professional technical diploma: 2 million Tomans
  • High school diploma: 3 million Tomans
  • Azad University Associate: 6 million Tomans
  • Bachelor of Azad University: 9 million Tomans
  • Master’s degree: 15 million Tomans
  • Doctorate with design and dissertation: 38 million Tomans

Some 50% is received as an advance payment before the work for the administrative affairs of the university from the customer. Upon receipt of the document and dissatisfaction, the entire amount will be returned to your account.

Duration of work for preparing the documents:

  • Diploma: 15 working days
  • Associate: 20 working days
  • Bachelor: 20 working days
  • Master: 45 working days
  • Doctor: 60 working days

These corrupt institutions justify their actions in such a ridiculous way: “You must waste several years of your life to study at any level, and even study at some universities you have to pay a fee to continue your studies and get a degree. While you can avoid wasting your time by buying a degree and spend your time doing things that you enjoy or earn money from.”

Mostaghel in another part of its article wrote: “In the 2000s, the appearance of the fake doctorate of Kordan (Ali Kordan, Minister of Interior of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s government) which became famous in world literature as Kordanism, and according to informed people, even a percentage of the high degrees of MPs and other government officials are suspicious and possibly fake.”

This corrupt behavior is so expanded that people are joking about it while they say: “If you cannot buy the university entrance exam questions, you can buy university chairs.”

Iran’s Corrupt Rulers and the Economy’s Wild Horse

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After three months of promises by Iran’s president to change the economic situation in the country, nothing has changed, and the state media speaks every day about an incurable economy.

“Ghalibaf and Raisi none of them has an accurate understanding of macroeconomic issues and are unfamiliar with the behavior of economic variables and knowledge of economics.” (State-run daily Jahan-e-Sanat, November 10, 2021)

Iran’s economic crises have not been created overnight so that someone could solve them just with some hollow promises, Iran watchers argue. And the crises are the outcome of 40 years of the mullahs’ rule.

Thus, how is it even possible that people who are the causes of such a situation be able to make changes in this dramatic economic situation? Especially those, who according to the regime’s media have no understanding of the macroeconomy.

As the state-run daily Jahan-e-Sanat said, the country’s economy is like a wild horse that does not tolerate any ride. And if there is no action to solve this complicated issue, the ground will become harder and the horse wilder. The government is not able to change the people’s living situation.

Over the last three months, prices, inflation, and liquidity have been increasing despite the regime’s promises. For one month, 146 trillion tomans have been added to the country’s liquidity; about 48 trillion Tomans per day, 200 billion Tomans per hour, and 3.3 billion Tomans per minute.

Liquidity increased by 17% in September compared to March 2020 and jumped by 40.5% compared to September 2020. The main reason for this jump is the adoption of inflationary policies to cover the government budget deficit.

The inhuman policies of the regime’s governments in the field of money, which has a great impact on increasing the inflation rate and pushing more people below the poverty line, have caused a disaster, so much so that one of the economic experts named Farshad Momeni said:

“I want to compare the amount of rent in the policy of inflation and the rent in the dual exchange rate. My research shows that rents in inflation are 350 times higher than rents in the dual exchange rate, and therefore corruption and rents in inflationary policies are far higher than in the dual exchange rates.” (State-run daily Setareh-e-Sobh, November 10, 2021)

Before the start of Ebrahim Raisi’s presidency in a meeting with the country’s chamber of Commerce, he criticized money injection and highlighted the management of the currency rate. In those days, the dollar rate was almost 23,000 tomans, but now, three months after this promise, it has reached almost 28,000 tomans, which shows a 20% increase in just three months.

It seems that the government does not intend to jeopardize the interests of dollar revenuers in Iran by lowering the dollar rate. Inflation is not an inevitable event, but a policy. An inflationary economy provides the conditions for wealthy people to make huge profits without a real change in the quality and quantity of domestic production.

The country’s wealthy citizens are primarily the regime’s elements. An examination of the financial statements of many large steel, mining, petrochemical, etc. rent-seeking companies shows that these companies have suddenly experienced high profits at the same time as the dollar has risen dramatically and because of inflation. These profits are practically money that has flowed from the pockets of the poor to the pockets of the rich.

Therefore, the relationship between rising inflation and corruption and looting in the regime that has been going on for 4 decades has also been strengthened and increased in Raisi’s government.

Abbas Abdi, one of the regime’s elements, described the current economic situation as follows:

“We have been facing double-digit inflation for decades and have been deprived of sustainable long-term growth. Our share of the global economy has also declined sharply. People who run the affairs do not have the understanding and skills to achieve economic growth.

“Unscientific and irrational mindsets that severely destroyed the economy and disrupted social and economic structures have ultimately deepened corruption, pervades inefficiencies, destroyed employment, and squandered large amounts of foreign exchange earnings. Squander in the strict sense of the word.” (State-run daily Etemad, November 10, 2021)

In COP26, Attentions Turn to Iran’s Environmental Issues

While the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26) in its last day, discussions about the increasing number of storms, floods, and wildfires around the world have been high on the agenda. The impacts of climate change are devastating, affecting the lives of tens of millions of people annually.

There are several advances to tackle climate change which are leading to cleaner air and restoring nature but it’s a slow process. If the countries of the world join forces to help each other, the sooner we can see bigger improvements.

Iran is a disaster-prone country due both to its geological and climatic situation, facing both flooding and drought. The variation of these pressures reflects the wide diversity of climatic and geophysical zones in the country.

Mass deforestation, deteriorating ecosystems, and the rapid desertification of agricultural land are placing significant pressures on Iran’s environment. Disaster planning is greatly needed to overcome the impacts of natural disasters in the country, as well as a reduction in the actions causing deforestation and desertification. An important task is to provide education and training for all citizens to help them respond better to natural disasters. As Iran is prone to relatively frequent earthquakes, there is a need to improve the research and monitoring of these events to allow for better earthquake prediction technology, as well as improving and implementing earthquake-proof building regulations throughout the country.

Population density and its distribution is a major pressure factor along with transportation, mainly in urban areas, also issues such as vehicle age, numbers, and fuel use.

With so many people packed into cities, great pressures are placed on resources. The effects of such urbanization include poor air quality, light pollution, noise, encroachment on green spaces, and excess pressure on waste disposal and recycling. The worse the conditions are, it can lead to serious the public health situations and sanitation issues. With the majority of Iran’s landmass mountainous, and the environmental issues causing rapid desertification, the remaining arable land is scarce at best, so the cities have seen a mass influx of people migrating to them.

Despite promises of reform, human rights violations are still “rife” in Iran. Among the groups that have been targeted are environmental campaigners, with more than 60 activists and researchers arrested in 2018.

Widespread unrest across Iran has been building in recent years, with the environmental issues faced by citizens as one of the causes, with the other issues being the severe economic decline and the regime’s rule overall.

The most serious environmental issue currently faced in Iran is droughts. However, this is not a naturally occurring situation. The severe water shortage has been created by the Iranian government due to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) dam construction projects, along with the regime’s institutionalized corruption and the mismanagement of already scarce water resources.

This crisis has led to thousands of villages being abandoned as the land becomes unsustainable. Predictions have suggested that millions of people will end up being displaced as the problems worsen.

Natural climate variabilities, climate change, droughts, and economic sanctions have had undeniable impacts on Iran’s environment and its water resources. Yet Iran’s environmental and water problems are mostly manmade, which is the product of decades of absolutely poor management coupled with lack of foresight, uncoordinated planning, and the wrong perception of development.

Iran’s Projection on the Terror Attack Against Al-Kadhimi in Fear of Accountability

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The news of the drone attack on the Iraqi Prime Minister’s residential house, after the initial global coverage, has now received a lot of attention in Iran’s state-run media.

Most of the international media and even some of the officials of the countries pointed their fingers at the Iranian regime and its proxy forces in Iraq as the main culprit behind this terror attack.

Over the past years as many of the analysts are saying the main source of nearly all the terror attacks is the Iranian regime. Destabilizing this country to hide its domestic weaknesses.

A look at the situation of the regime’s mercenaries in Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and Iraq confirms this fact. The comfort, tranquility, stability, and security of the people of the Middle East have been taken away from them by the interventions and crimes of the regime’s proxy forces who are die-hard loyalists of the Velayat-e-Faqih (regime of supreme religious rule) in Iran.

The regime’s supreme leader is performing these crimes with the excuse of his regime’s ‘strategic depth’ and is even proud of it, as many of its officials announced that many times in their speeches.

But now this has become a problem for the regime because they have poisoned the atmosphere so much that it has become for themselves toxic.

And in the light of the people’s awareness and protests, the ground for their destruction has been created. This is something that many of the regime’s officials are speaking about.

The humiliating defeat of the regime’s affiliated factions in Iraq’s recent election is also the manifestation of the demands of the people who are tired of the crimes and looting of the regime’s groups and will undoubtedly change the political sphere of Iraq.

Thus, the regime’s attack against Iraq’s prime minister has become a crisis that is reflecting the regime’s other crises. The media affiliated with the regime’s supreme leader’s faction were forced to describe this terrorist act as a show and fabrication and the work of the Iraqi Prime Minister himself.

Kayhan newspaper, the main mouthpiece of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, wrote an article about this issue with a strange title, “The unprofitable terror of Iraq’s prime minister, real or show?”

The state-run daily Resalat labeled, “Al-Kadhimi’s assassination alleged by Iraqi security sources.” Meanwhile, the state-run daily Siasat Rooz, with the title, “Foreign think tank sedition with the suspected attack on Iraqi Prime Minister’s house”, questioned the principle of the assassination.

Media outlets from the regime’s so-called reformist faction have shown the same reaction more or less. For example, Hassan Danaeifar, the regime‘s former ambassador to Iraq, claimed in the Etemad newspaper that the incident was a conspiracy against the regime and implicitly referred to the United States and Saudi Arabia. Ali Shamkhani had the same reaction which was reflected by the state-run daily Aftab-e-Yazd.

Now the wave of this terror act is moving back to the regime. The examples are very clear. For example, the state-run daily Arman in an article entitled, ‘Consequences of the assassination attempt on the Iraqi Prime Minister’, pointed to the disarming of the regime’s proxy forces in Iraq and wrote:

“What seems important is the consequences of today’s drone strikes; even considered as a show as the allies (of the regime) say, or if it was real; as the Iraqi government and other political currents emphasize, it is usually the official narrative that is accepted by the region and the international community.

“One of the most important consequences could be the serious consideration of the issue of ‘unbridled weapons’ and its conversion into a national demand. The mean of the government and its allies are the weapons of Hashad al-Shaabi.”

It also emphasized: “The plan of the Iraqi, regional and international opponents to the system, is preventing the Hashad al-Shaabi to become another Hezbollah in the region.”

“Kazemi’s failed assassination and potential crisis for Iran’ is the title of another article in the state-run Arman daily that highlights other dimensions of this crisis for the regime. It also said:

“In my opinion, the story of the ‘field’ (so-called the regime is military actions) in Iraq has reached its final stages and calls for the arrival of ‘diplomacy’. Is the system ready for this scenario in Iraq? Apparently seems that it is not. From the conscience, only God is aware! So, is the instability of Iraq and the entry of the (system) into its possible quagmire certain?”

Iran: Record Number of Protests Took Place Within a Two-Week Period Between September and October

Across Iran, there have been a reported number of 253 protests that have taken place between September 23 and October 7 with people coming from all walks of life to take to the streets and voice their concerns over Iran’s current social and economic crises.

The crises are a result of the Iranian regime’s institutionalized corruption and their malign activities that have had devastating consequences for the Iranian people, with the majority of them being pushed below the poverty line and struggling to provide for their families. As the regime has yet to address any of the socio-economic problems, there is no end in sight for society’s tension and outrage.

On Monday, farmers in the city of Isfahan held a demonstration outside of the local Water and Electricity organization to protest for their right to water irrigation. The angry farmers managed to storm the office in the building, despite a large anti-riot unit presence at the scene.

In the last few years, farmers in Isfahan have been holding protests and demanding their right to water irrigation. Eastern parts of Isfahan province have been deprived of natural water of Zayanderude river following the redirection of its water to other regions.

Monday also saw a protest in the city of Larestan in the Shiraz province. A group of locals gathered outside of the Ministry of Roads and Urban Development office to protest the poor conditions of the Jahrom-Lae-Bandar Abbas transition road that runs through the area.

In Khuzestan, a demonstration took place for the third consecutive day with retirees of the Hafttappeh Sugarcane Factory in Shush demanding the payment of their long-overdue pensions and the wrong calculations of their bonuses.

On Sunday, several workers of Machine Sazi Arak held a protest gathering, demanding the immediate return of their fired co-workers, and an increase of salary in accordance with the current economic situation.

Four more protests took place on Sunday also. In Tabriz, retirees were demanding that their pensions should be adjusted to match the skyrocketing inflation rate in the country and the high costs of basic needs, while Miners of the Kerman Coal Company in southeast Iran demonstrated against the plans to privatize the mines and transfer their ownership to the Dalahu Company.

Another protest consisted of a group of nurses who work for Iran’s Social Security Organization. They rallied outside the regime’s Majlis (parliament) in Tehran with a number of demands, including the number of legal provisions commensurate with the Ministry of Health to be increased, and the law on Hard and Harmful Occupations to be enforced.

According to the protesting nurses, the regime has increased pressure on them, despite their difficult working conditions during the Covid-19 pandemic. These nurses had also held a protest gathering on Saturday in front of the regime’s Program and Budget Organization and Parliament.

Simultaneous protests were held in both Tehran and Mashhad on Sunday also by defrauded investors of the Caspian credit institution. The institution, which is affiliated with the notorious Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), has been scamming clients since 2016 by looting their deposits. Over the past few years, hundreds of protests have taken place by angry investors who have lost their life savings.

On Saturday, a number of teachers, who work in the most deprived areas of the East Azerbaijan province in Iran, took to the streets to demand their wages that have been delayed for 14 months. Despite the Covid-19 pandemic, the teachers still had to work but have been devoid of any payment of their salaries for almost a year and a half. As their usual salaries are around 3 million tomans, many teachers are living way below the poverty line.

On November 9, the state-run Jahan-e Sanat daily warned that the, “Lack of economic security, increasing financial problems, the severe decline in people’s livelihoods, growing inequalities, discrimination and the people’s distrust of officials with their consequences, growth and expansion lead in the long run to the system’s collapse.”

Banking Corruption in Iran

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi in a conference on the Ardabil Administrative Council regarding the duty of the banking system said:

“No bank is allowed to shut down any production unit. The production unit should be always operational. If a bank seeks a demand, there is no problem, but why is a production shut down? Why are the workers becoming unemployed? This is not right at all.

None of the production units should be shut down because the banks are pursuing their demands nationwide.” (State-TV, October 22, 2021)

Iran watchers say the Iranian President knows that he is lying, and he has absolutely no control over the banks.

Saeed Leylas, a state-affiliated expert, said: “We handed over the money to the esteemed investors. Immediately they have invested it outside the country in Real estate, gold, dollars. The official expert of the judiciary has committed officially robbery with the help of the bank’s administration. The reason for all these problems of corruption is the banking network.

“Especially private banks. They are the institutional looting mechanism of plundering Iran’s people. They printed banknotes to confront the coronavirus and inject it into the market. This is robbery. I know the banking network as the biggest source of corruption in Iran.” (Etemad Online)

Thus, this state-affiliated expert is showing the main address of the corruption in the country which is the government itself. So, the speeches of Raisi are meaningless.

Adel Peyghami, an economist and professor at Imam Sadegh University, said on State TV Channel 5:

“Where is this rent going? That money is created by banks. And banks are one of the institutions that must be corrected seriously in this surgery.”

“Moderator: ‘In these twenty years, where were those periods when the big rents were won by some groups and became a colony of power?’

“Adel Peyghami: ‘I said that a major part of it is in the field of the banking system and money creation.” (State TV Channel 5, October 29, 2021)

Meanwhile, Hossein Raghfar, another economist, about the corrupt banking system said: “While with this corrupt structure that exists in our banking system and our tax system, that is, we do not tax the rich, we do not tax the wealthy, our banking system equips the resources of the people, puts in the pocket of the car importer, who said that in the current situation of the country, we should import cars?” (State TV Channel 4, October 27, 2021)

Alireza Salimi, an MP, about the consequences of the banking system corruption, said: “It is necessary to reform the monetary and banking system and change the course of banks from entrepreneurship on the one hand and usurious banking operations on the other. Delay in reforming this process will ignite a fire that will turn the hegemony of the government and the nation to ashes.” (Parliament session, October 31, 2021)

Iran’s Government Agrees To Resume Nuclear Talks in Vienna Later This Month

The Iranian regime has finally agreed to resume nuclear talks in Vienna on November 29, following months of delaying and buying time for them to continue their malign activities unquestioned.

The date of the talks has been conveniently placed just days after scheduled sessions for the Board of Governors of the United Nation’s nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, seemingly the regime’s plan to force the Board of Governors to avoid passing any resolutions regarding their commitment violations of the 2015 nuclear deal, also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

Despite numerous efforts from the international community to bring the regime to comply with the JCPOA terms, the regime has blatantly carried on with the acceleration of their nuclear program, enriching uranium far beyond the limits allowed per the nuclear deal terms, and carrying out malign terrorist activities across the Middle East through their proxy groups.

It is clear beyond the shadow of a doubt that if the talks have been stalled, it is because of the regime’s lack of cooperation and its drive to extort the international community.

Sanctions that have been placed on Iran by the United States for their terrorist activities and human rights abuses were imposed by the U.S. Congress, so while the regime consistently calls for the sanctions to be lifted, this action is way beyond the power of the current presidential administration to lift them. U.S. legislators continue to agree that the Iranian regime still poses great threats to the international community.

The 2015 JCPOA was an agreement, and there was no legal or legislative force behind it because a considerable percent of U.S. lawmakers believed that it did not do enough to curb the regime’s terrorist threat.

While the regime has agreed to new talks, their main focus is to obtain further concessions from Western powers regarding their nuclear program. By continually stalling previous talks, they have bought time to quietly advance their uranium enrichment program in the hope that they will reach a level that will give them an upper hand in future negotiations.

Currently, the regime’s main issue in Iran is concerning the upcoming second anniversary of the November 2019 uprising that almost brought them to the brink of collapse. With the state of the economy and social crises in Iran now, the Iranian people are outraged and becoming more restive daily and consistently call for regime change at their protest rallies.

The mullahs have held on to power only through brute force, gunning down protesters in the streets, carrying out public executions, imprisoning and torturing dissidents, and appointing a mass murderer as president.

The mullahs are desperately clinging on to power as any sign of fragility on their part will cause them catastrophic consequences. If another wave of nationwide protests is triggered, leading to another uprising, the complete collapse of the regime would be inevitable.

This is a regime that only responds to firmness and strength. Any concessions to the ayatollahs will only aid and abet terrorism and destruction without addressing any of the threats they pose.