Iran's President Ties Drop in Currency to Sanctions - New York Times [dayinformations.blogspot.com]
PSY and Gangnam Style Take Over New York City (ê°ë¨ì¤íì¼)A KTU.com Exclusive! The Latest Dance Craze 'Gangnam Style' from Korean pop star and YouTube sensation Psy Takes Over New York City! Featuring @PaulWebGuy More at KTU.com @1035KTU Facebook.com/ktunewyork
TEHRAN â" Iranâs president admitted Tuesday that the American-led economic sanctions on the country were partly to blame for a breathtaking 40 percent fall in value of the Iranian national currency, the rial, over the past week. He pleaded with Iranians not to exchange their money for dollars and other foreign currencies.
Speaking during a news conference broadcast live by several domestic and international Iranian news channels, the president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, said Iran is facing a âpsychological warâ waged by the United States and aided by what he described as internal enemies.
The drop of the national currency is caused in part by the sanctions imposed by the West over Iranâs disputed nuclear program, which has prevented it from selling oil and transferring money, he said. The president also blamed a domestic band of â22 people in three separate circlesâ who with âone phone callâ could manipulate foreign exchange trades in Iran.
One Web site, Mashregh news, reported Tuesday that President Ahmadinejad had ordered the arrests of those âdisturbing the currency market.â
The fall in the currencyâs value has presented Iran with enormous economic risks, including the possibility of starting a severe bout of inflation, which is already high. A rising sense of economic crisis in Iran could also pose political challenges to the countryâs leaders.
Mr. Ahmadinejadâs dramatic address was aimed at the teachers, bus drivers, businessmen and others who have been frantically converting their savings into dollars and euros at the dozens of unofficial currency-exchange shops in the center of Tehran.
âI ask you, dear people, do not change your money into foreign currency,â Mr. Ahmadinejad said, stressing that such moves would only help the âenemy.â
But on the streets, a fresh day of roller-coaster currency drama played out, in which the rial first fell, then surprisingly strengthened and sank again, to settle around its Monday record low of roughly 37,000 to the dollar. The rate had been 24,600 rials per dollar as of last Monday.
Playing into the mixed emotions expressed by many Iranians, who are confused over whether to blame economic mismanagement by the government or the Western sanctions, Mr. Ahmadinejad fully put the blame on the United States and âinternal enemies.â
He described the United States government as plotting to make Iranians miserable, stressing that the sanctions are hurting normal people instead of Iranâs leaders. âThey are telling you lies, their pressures are on the people, not on the government,â he said.
Foreign exchange supplies in the country are sufficient to quench all needs, he said, and he lauded the central bank, which, in his words, had managed to âfind waysâ around the obstacles.
âThe enemies are trying to blame the economic problems on the government. No. Never. There is no economic reason for these erratic ups and downs,â Mr. Ahmadinejad said. âI have no doubt that we will return to normal conditions.â
But he did not offer any specific solution to the crisis, and the rialâs value weakened after he spoke. The reaction prompted one currency changer to predict the rial would continue to lose value against the dollar and other currencies.
Mr. Ahmadinejad said the economic pressures on Iran caused by the sanctions would never force it to compromise on the countryâs uranium enrichment program, which Iranian leaders say is purely peaceful but the West suspects is a cloak for developing nuclear weapons capability. But the president repeated an earlier Iranian offer to stop enriching uranium to 20 percent purity, if world powers would be willing to provide Iran with that grade of nuclear fuel.
âWe have announced that if they give us the fuel, we will stop production,â Mr. Ahmadinejad said. âBut so far no one is prepared to do so.â
Also on Tuesday an Iranian lawmaker threatened that Iran would enrich uranium to 60 percent purity â" much closer to bomb-grade material, if talks with world powers failed.
The lawmaker, Mansour Haqigatpour, deputy head of the Foreign Policy and National Security Committee in parliament, said Iran needed the higher enriched fuel for still-to-be-designed nuclear submarines and ships, Iran state television English language news channel Press TV reported.
Question by Happy Girl 20: Is the new "Timeline" layout on Facebook going to be made mandatory on all profiles? Has anyone seen the status going around on Facebook that the new "Timeline" layout will be made mandatory on all profiles as and from the end of this week or something to that effect? Is is it just an unfounded rumour? Does anyone know? Thank you. Best answer for Is the new "Timeline" layout on Facebook going to be made mandatory on all profiles?:
Answer by abraXus
no one is sure exactly when, but yes, eventually is will become mandatory
Answer by Angelica Enriquez
No One Is Soo Sure, /: But iHope Not
Answer by Selena
Eventually it will be mandatory and put on all profiles
Answer by Rom Cartridge
Although this kind of changes have never been optional, until this moment Facebook did not inform about any established date for the Timeline upgrade to be mandatory for all users.
Answer by Andrew
I don't hope so, I hate it.Anyway, Nobody knows :) Good Luck!
New Order Blue MondayOriginal video for Blue Monday by New Order 1983





0 comments:
Post a Comment