Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Iran to Host 2018 IASP World Conference – Financial Tribune

The former capital city of Isfahan will host the 35th International Association of Science Parks (IASP) World Conference in 2018. Deputy Minister of Research and Technology Vahid Ahmadi made the announcement on Wednesday, adding that given the development in Iran of knowledge-based activities, Irans bid for hosting the International Association of Science Parks (IASP) World Conference 2018 has been approved by the IASP board of directors, which is an opportunity for Iran to show its capacities and potentials on the international scene. Irans Isfahan Science and Technology Town (ISTT) had been running against Karolinska Institutet Science Park, Sweden, for the hosting event. Ahmadi went on to add that in the past three years, the total value of Irans knowledge-based production exports reached $200 million, with $125 million made in the current fiscal. Last year, $125 million knowledge-based and technological products were exported to regional countries and to European states, he said, adding UAE, China, Kazakhstan and several countries in Eastern Europe are waiting to import Iranian knowledge-based products. These companies include computer software and applications as well as industrial machinery, to name a few of the sectors exporting their products and services. Iran has been active in the field of science parks and incubators and has had the largest number of IASP members in the region. According to Ahmadi, currently 39 science and technology parks and 180 technology business incubators are active in Iran, with 30,000 people employed in the sector. The large number of science parks has created a large pool of specialists interested to participate in IASP World Conference. According to President of ISTT Mehdi Keshmiri, Isfahan Science and Technology Town (ISTT) has been a member of IASP for more than l5 years during which it haspromoted IASP not only in Iran, but also in other countries in the region. ISTT is proud of the fact that it has been able to assume a leadership position in West Asia and North Africa region and hold the presidency of this division three times since its establishment. In the past 15 years, ISTT has organized regional conferences including joint IASP and ASPA (Asian Science Park Association) meetings, Keshmiri said in his welcoming message. Moscow hosted the previous edition of the conference in 2016.

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Iran to Host 2018 IASP World Conference - Financial Tribune

Is Iran-Turkey tension intentional? – Al-Monitor

Foreign Ministers Mevlut Cavusoglu (L) of Turkey and Mohammad Javad Zarif of Iran attend a meeting in Moscow, Russia, Dec. 20, 2016. (photo byREUTERS/Maxim Shemetov)

Author:Fehim Tatekin Posted February 24, 2017

For hundreds of years, since the 1639 Qasr-e Shirin Treaty, Turkey and Iran have maintained a pretty peaceful coexistence, not letting occasional political spats and regional rivalry affect their economic relations. Both sides have become masters of not crossing critical thresholds in their relations. But political tensions arising from the Syrian civil war have eroded that mastery, and economic relations are now threatened.

Sometimes, Turkey just can't seem to help itself. Other times, its diplomatic lapses seem intentional. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu both managed to insult Iran recently in high-profile venues, resulting in high-profile economic damage.

In a statement last week in Bahrain, Erdogan accused Iran of trying to split Iraq and Syria by resorting to Persian nationalism, which he said had to be prevented. Cavusoglu, speaking Feb. 19 at the Munich conference, said, Iran is trying to create two Shiite states in Syria and Iraq. This is very dangerous. It must be stopped.

Not surprisingly, Tehran was angry. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi replied strongly, saying those who support terror organizations, who cause bloodshed, who lead the way to tensions and instability in the region cannot escape from their responsibility by accusing others. We are acting patiently, but there is a limit to that. If our Turkish friends repeat these type of remarks, we will have to respond.

The tension cast a shadow over the Turkey-Iran Business Forum scheduled for Feb. 25 in Tehran. Turkey was going to be represented by Minister of Economy Nihat Zeybekci, and Iran by Minister of Industry, Mining and Trade Mohammad Reza Nematzadeh. Because of the polemics between the two countries, Zeybekci canceled his trip. The forum was then postponed. It's not known if new dates are being set.

This was major. The Foreign Economic Relations Board of Turkey (DEIK) had arranged for executives from about a hundred Turkish companies to attend. Officials also had planned during the forum to inaugurate the Turkish Trade Center in Tehran.

Turkish businessmen had been waiting for such a forum, hoping to find lucrative opportunities in energy, petrochemicals, mining, construction, retailing, logistics and tourism as some sanctions on Iran are being lifted. DEIK issued a statement saying that the meeting could have been instrumental in increasing the volume of trade to the desired level of $30 billion in two years.

Turkish companies that had not already prepared to go to Tehran soon after the sanctions started being lifted aren't sure if they can manage their projects in Iran. None of them have pulled out, but they are taking their time to engage, worried that doing business in Iran might not be as easy as before. For example, the Iranian Civil Aviation Department has been delaying the issuance of permits for charter flights to Turkey. This began before the current tension arose, but it contributes to economic uncertainty and caused severe disappointment in Turkeys tourism sector, which hosts an average of 1.5-2 million Iranians every year.

Organizers felt the Turkey-Iran Business Forum could have gone a long way toward facilitating trade.

It's important to understand the background of the tension between Ankara and Tehran. No doubt, Turkey is trying to find someone to blame for the disaster in Syria and for Ankara losing its influence in Iraq. Turkish officials try to explain their situation by saying they could succeed were it not for Iranian interference. But there are three other important factors.

First is Turkeys desperate need for hot money from the Gulf to ease its shortage of market funds. Ankara hopes that by adopting an anti-Iran stance, relations with Shiite-phobic Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries will be smoother and profitable.

Second, while looking for markets for its all-important defense industry, Turkey has noted that Gulf countries spend generously on armaments. The political masterminds in Ankara are trying to promote an exaggerated sense of the "Iranian threat" to encourage Gulf countries to buy Turkish weapons.

Turkeys pro-Islamic daily, Yeni Safak, a virulently anti-Iran newspaper, has run headlines such as Before missiles hit Mecca and Before Mecca wars begin, before tanks surround Kaaba that reflect the Turkish governments motivation.

Ibrahim Karagul, the dailys editor-in-chief, wrote Feb. 16, "Though the US and Europe largely supply the region's defense needs, and billion-dollar arms agreements are being made with these countries," Turkey's defense industry will see new opportunities, partly because of rising security threats.

"It is no longer speculation that the Gulf funds that were directed toward different sectors until now are going to create a new wave in Turkey's relations with the region," he wrote. Joint defense agreements also breed rapport, though "the situation is beyond economy for Saudi Arabia and Gulf countries like Qatar and Bahrain; these countries are under serious threat.

He added, There is concern about an Iranian expansion that would target the entire Arab world, which it feels no need to hide, with plans to take over Mecca. The Iranian missiles sent through Yemen to Jeddah and Riyadh have revealed Tehran's intentions."

The third factor is a desire to grab a partnership opportunity with the new US administration. Gulf countries are delighted that President Donald Trump has again made Iran a target. This is the concept Erdogan has his eyes on.

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Is Iran-Turkey tension intentional? - Al-Monitor

Iran, Malaysia Integrating Banking Transactions – Financial Tribune

After negotiations between the officials of Iranian and Malaysian central banks, the two countries agreed to integrate their bank card systems and discussed conducting business in local currencies. Iranian banks are now connected to TARGET 2 and trade with Europe is underway. Iran is also eager to expand its banking ties with Malaysian banks, said Gholamali Kamyab, the deputy governor for foreign exchange affairs at the Central Bank of Iran, as reported by IBENA. TARGET2 is an interbank payment system for the real-time processing of cross-border transfers throughout the European Union. An Iranian banking delegation is in Kuala Lumpur, the capital of Malaysia, meeting with the senior managers of Malaysian commercial banks and officials of the Malaysian central bank (Bank Negara Malaysia). The Iranian delegation is headed by Kamyab who held a meeting with the Assistant Governor of the Central Bank of Malaysia Adnan Zaylani Zahed. The deputy governor of CBI explained the situation of Irans economy after the sanctions were lifted and assessed ways of boosting bilateral trade relations. Kamyab noted that the Central Bank of Irans policies are aimed at easing business ties with other nations and using local currencies for trade. In line with the aforementioned policy, we welcome the interest of Malaysian banks to open accounts in Iranian commercial banks in local currencies. Malaysian banks can also transfer money in the currencies of other countries, if the Iranian side approves, he added. Adnan Zaylani Zahed also expressed Malaysias interest in transferring money in Japanese yen and Chinese yuan. Currently Malaysia is using yen and yuan for business and transfer of cash. Trade ties between the two countries looks promising under this framework, he said. The delegation also included representatives from Iranian banks, Melli, Mellat, Pasargad, Keshavarzi and Middle East. They had back-to-back meetings with the officials of Malaysian banks like Islam Bank, Exim Bank, Me Bank and CIMB on boosting bilateral relations.

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Iran, Malaysia Integrating Banking Transactions - Financial Tribune

Stanford’s Iranian Studies Program highlights Iran’s art, culture via new initiatives – Stanford University News

Acclaimed Iranian filmmaker and playwright Bahram Beyzaie was censored for decades in his home country and was not able to screen or publish many of his artistic works.

Now a Stanford lecturer, Beyzaie directed and staged a nine-hour, two-part play last spring as part of the Stanford Festival of Iranian Arts initiative, launched by the Hamid and Christina Moghadam Program in Iranian Studies.

Go to the web site to view the video.

Video by Kurt Hickman

As part of the Stanford Iranian Studies Program, the initiative on Art, Social Space and Public Discourse in Iran features art exhibitions, film screenings and music.

He said he felt a freedom he once believed was unattainable.

It was hard to leave my country, Beyzaie said. I love my country but this was not believable for me to do in Iran.

Since the Stanford Iranian Studies Programs inception 10 years ago, its director, Abbas Milani, has worked on bringing artists like Beyzaie to Stanford to highlight different forms of art in Iran and promote discussion about Iranian and Iranian-American culture.

One of the most telling facets of every culture is the art, said Milani, who is also a co-director of the Iran Democracy Project at the Hoover Institution. And you cant understand Iran today unless you understand what is happening on the street, in the underground theaters, poetry readings, fashion shows and raves. All of that is part of Iran.

Irans rich history of culture and art can be overlooked against the backdrop of its governments actions, notably its targeted censorship toward art and film after the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

AcclaimeddirectorBahramBeyzaie(center),theBitaDaryabariVisitingProfessorofIranianStudies,sharesthestagewithhisactorsafteraStanford performanceoftheIranianplay Tarabnameh. (Image credit: Vahid Zamani)

Beyzaie, 78, whose films focus on Irans history and cultural identity, lived under the governments censorship for many years while working as the director of the Theater Arts Department at Tehran University. But life was hard for him and his family, he said.

It was very difficult to survive, Beyzaie said.

In addition to being constantly censored, Beyzaie was eventually banned from teaching at Tehran University because of his parents Bah faith, which came under persecution after the Islamic Revolution. The followers of that religion, which is considered to be the worlds youngest monotheistic religion, have faced harassment, discrimination and even execution in Iran.

When an opportunity to teach at Stanford arose six years ago, Beyzaie said he had to leave to ensure a better future for his then 14-year-old son, who wouldnt have been able to get an education in Iran because of their familys association with the Bah faith.

It was disappointing, but we had to leave, Beyzaie said.

Beyzaie said his first time putting on a play at Stanford was liberating.

Thats when I realized: Oh, we could do that here? Oh, we are free, Beyzaie said. It was a mixture of happiness and sorrow.

In addition to attracting Iranian artists and scholars, the Iranian Studies Program also has created several initiatives, including sponsoring the recent effort on Art, Social Space and Public Discourse in Iran, to bring art exhibitions, film screenings and music from Iran to Stanford and the surrounding communities.

The new effort aims to showcase different types of Iranian public art, stimulate discussions about public art and its definition, and foster collaborations between Iranian artists and artists in the San Francisco Bay Area through new classes, events and panels.

One of our objectives with the initiative was to open a window to Iran that goes beyond media representation and what occupies contemporary popular imagination, said Ala Ebtekar, a lecturer with the Department of Art and Art History, who is leading the new initiative. It is precisely in these public practices that we find connections and similarities to other social practices across cultures.

A unique aspect of Iranian arts history is Naqqali, a genre of oral storytelling primarily performed in coffeehouses. As part of this performance, a Naqqal, which means a storyteller in Farsi, retells a well-known story from classical Persian poetry.

This celebrated art form, which was unofficially banned in Iran for some time after the 1979 Revolution largely because of its association with political activism, was added in 2011 to UNESCOs List of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding.

But in recent years, new generations of artists in Iran have rediscovered the practice of Naqqali as well as experimented with other forms of public art, such as graffiti.

The art scene in Iran is booming right now, Ebtekar said. Galleries are popping up everywhere.

Bringing attention to the old and new art forms of Iran was part of the goal of a three-day symposium in the fall that kicked off the public art initiative. As part of the event, two Naqqals performed at Darvazeh Ghar coffeehouse in Tehran, which hasnt held a Naqqali performance since pre-revolutionary time. Segments of the show were broadcast live at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco.

This special performance reignited the performative potentialities of the site and introduced a unique type of storytelling to a new audience at the Asian Art Museum, Ebtekar said.

As part of the initiative, Ebtekar is also teaching a course, Public Space in Iran: Murals, Graffiti, Performance, where Stanford students learn about Irans older traditions of performing arts as well as contemporary art practices.

In the course, students interacted with Ghalamdar, a U.K.-based Iranian graffiti artist, who created three new art pieces during his month-long stay at Stanford, one of which was displayed inside the Coulter Art Gallery at the McMurtry Building. His other two works, on which he collaborated with local artists, are murals that are located in San Franciscos Mission District and at Jack London Square in Oakland.

The Iranian Studies Programs art initiatives have not only illuminated the current art scene in Iran but also brought together members of the Iranian diaspora community, a large portion of which is located in the San Francisco Bay Area.

A recent highlight of that collaboration was the nine-hour performance of the traditional Iranian play Tarabnameh last year. Directed by Beyzaie, the play was staged with an ensemble of 40 largely nonprofessional actors, most of whom were part of the Iranian diaspora in the U.S. or in Europe. Some traveled directly from Iran to participate in the play, which Milani described as a historic moment for Iranian theater.

Beneath the radical veneer of Irans current regime, there is another Iran, Milani said. Appraising the full complexity of Iran requires understanding the country in its entirety, and art and cultural history is essential to that.

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Iran: No to US troops in Syria, nuclear deal to stay – CNN.com

He also said that the agreement with Iran to limit its nuclear program -- brokered in 2015 by the US, Iran and five other world powers -- will stay in place, despite noises to the contrary from members of US President Donald Trump's administration.

Speaking on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, Zarif said there was an international consensus not to let the agreement -- which took two years to negotiate -- unravel.

"I believe everybody, including experts in the United States, know this was the best deal possible for all concerned, not just Iran but the US too," he said.

"It was a triumph of diplomacy over coercion, because coercion doesn't work any more."

Regarding Syria, where Iran is in alliance with Russia in supporting the government of President Bashar al-Assad, the 57-year-old Iranian diplomat said it was the US "occupation" of Iraq that had created ISIS.

"We cannot commit to solutions that are part of the problem," he said. "I believe that the presence of foreign troops in Arab territory is a recipe for those extremists to rally behind and gain new fighters from disenfranchised youth."

Zarif said that sanctions won't work with Iran.

"Everybody (in) the past who has tested Iran know we don't respond well to threats. We respond well to mutual respect and mutual interests."

Zarif said the Obama administration tried to use economic sanctions to curtail Iran's nuclear program, but eventually failed, with Iran increasing their number of nuclear centrifuges tenfold in that period.

"The reason Obama came to the negotiating table was because sanctions did not work," Zarif told CNN.

Zarif said Trump's proposed, but currently stalled, travel ban on seven mainly Muslim countries including Iran "was an affront to the entire nation."

"You cannot find any Iranian who has committed a single act of terror against Americans, in any of these atrocities that have taken place," he said. "Iran has always condemned every single terrorist incident in the United States since 9/11."

Zarif said the ban was a departure from previous US policy that took issue with the government but not the Iranian people, and added that Iranians were among the most successful immigrants to the US.

"They (the US) don't understand in a globalized world you cannot contain threats to one locality. Syria is now a training ground for terrorists creating havoc everywhere," Zarif said.

Amanpour asked the Iranian Foreign Minister why Tehran chose to intervene in Syria on behalf of President Assad. "There are 500,000 people dead, there are twelve million refugees, there is torture, there is mass hanging -- it is not my impression, those are the facts," she said.

"Mistakes were made in Syria, as in the past mistakes have been made," he replied. "The same people who armed Daesh [ISIS], armed the terrorist groups, were the same people who armed Saddam Hussein, were the same people who created and armed al Qaeda."

"We should not continue to repeat history and then blame people who were on the right side."

Responding to a question about people fearing Iran -- partly because of its support for Hezbollah -- Zarif said the Lebanese Shia militia entered Syria on the request of Assad "to prevent these extremist forces (ISIS and other Sunni Islamist groups) from infiltrating into Lebanon, which would be a threat against all of us."

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Iran: No to US troops in Syria, nuclear deal to stay - CNN.com