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Iran woes
hurt Dubai
DUBAI (United Arab Emirates)—As the sun sets, the sky slowly turns a
deep orange rose over Dubai. Crates of merchandise — food, clothes,
General Electric appliances, Hewlett-Packard computers — are loaded onto
dhows, the traditional wooden vessels that still ply the ancient routes
to Iran about 60 miles to the north.
But it’s no longer business as usual. The West, led by the United
States, is cracking down on business in and out of Iran to protest
against its nuclear ambitions. And Dubai is caught in the middle — eager
to maintain its lucrative business with Iran just across the Gulf, but
wary of angering the United States and the United Nations.
So the pressure is increasing on thousands of Iranian businessmen in
Dubai, such as Mustafa Hoobakht. Hoobakht sends Iran refrigerators,
freezers and even the color for Teflon pots and pans that he imports
from Germany, but these days he has trouble getting bank loans because
of the crackdown. His profit is barely $100,000, down from a minimum of
$800,000 to $900,000 in the past. “It’s all been loss for me,” he says.
“It’s the hardest time I’ve ever had, because fish need water to survive
and a trader needs money.” In the Bastakiya quarter of Dubai, rows of
tall wind-towers and rectangular, coral-stone houses with beautifully
carved wooden doors and windows are testimony to a strong connection
with Iran. This is where many wealthy Sunni Muslim merchants from Iran’s
southern Gulf coast settled at the turn of the last century, fleeing
rising tariffs in their country. The neighborhood is named after the
Bastak region in Iran from where they came, bringing their architecture
and way of life.
Today, their offspring make up a good portion of the population of the
United Arab Emirates, to which Dubai belongs. The men in their headdress
and flowing white Arab robes known as dishdashas are indistinguishable
from their Arab brethren.
After the Islamic Revolution, the Emirates was the only country in the
region to open its arms to Iranians, this time mostly Shiites. Some
450,000 Iranians now have residency here, and about 8,500 Iranian
businesses are registered in the Emirates. The Emirates holds about $300
billion in assets from Iranians living abroad, the second largest amount
after the United States.
While many Iranian exiles in places such as London or Los Angeles want
to topple the Islamic regime, Iranians here maintain close personal
contacts to home. In the 21st-century bazaar that is Dubai, Iranians are
among the chief investors. They worry that more severe U.N. sanctions —
even worse, war — will deal a serious blow to Dubai and the rest of the
Persian Gulf.
Compared with other Arab Gulf states, the Emirates enjoys exceptional
relations with Iran that have weathered many storms in the past. But the
relationship is under strain from increasing U.S. pressure to isolate
Tehran. The prospect of more U.N. sanctions dimmed somewhat recently
when U.S. intelligence concluded that Iran had halted nuclear arms
development. But Washington is slapping its own unilateral actions on
Iran, targeting energy firms and shutting down operations of Iranian
banks in America.
Already, the U.S. government has stepped up its anti-Iran efforts in
Dubai, opening the State Department’s Iran Regional Presence Office. In
March, Stuart Levy, the U.S. undersecretary for terrorism and financial
intelligence, traveled to Dubai to warn Arab bankers to halt dealings
with Iran or face U.S. sanctions. Washington and the Emirates also
maintain a joint team to track Iran-linked financial transactions,
ostensibly for ties to Tehran’s nuclear program.
Although there has been no official change of policy toward Iranian
businesses by the Central Bank in the Emirates, most international and
local banks here — including the National Bank of Dubai — are issuing
fewer letters of credit for trade finance involving Iranian-owned
businesses. The Emirates also acted on a U.N. move earlier this year
against Iran’s Bank Sepah, which is said to be linked to Iran’s Islamic
Revolutionary Guards Corps., a target of U.S. sanctions. “There are 48
European banks based here that have started imposing restrictions on
companies that do business with Iran, even though they know the
merchants very well and have a history with them,” says Hadi Motameni,
president of the Iranian Business Council.—Agencies
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