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Weekly Worker 680 Thursday July 5 2007 Subscribe to the Weekly Worker

Petrol rationing sparks protests

After months of hesitation and delay, Iran’s islamic rulers this week gave a two-hour warning before imposing fuel rationing for private vehicles. Yassamine Mather comments


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Some £1,859 was added this week to the sum in hand for this year’s Summer Offensive, our annual two-month fundraising drive. Particular thanks to comrades MJ and MM, who with their £200 apiece helped drive forward our running total, as we finish our second week up to £4,956.50. Also many thanks to comrades like JB and MF who have either written off party expenses or trimmed expenditure on various necessities, thus saving us money not simply for this two-month period but for the year ahead.

The SO is always an opportunity for comrades to take a step back, look at what the party spends its money on and think of ways to economise. It is important to emphasise, however, that we do need real money - jingly-jangly legal tender in our collective pocket - as well as cost-cutting schemes. This campaign provides a vital annual boost to party coffers that, if we run a good one, can carry us through much of the rest of the year. Certainly we could do with more help from our readers, not least our e-readers (last week there were 46,953 of you, by the way).

The Socialist Workers Party’s annual Marxism school begins on July 4 and this is normally a pretty decent opportunity for comrades to sell books, papers and badges to the hundreds of participants, many of whom avidly read us on line, of course. So I’m looking forward next week to reporting good news.

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Although Iran has huge energy reserves, its refining capacity is limited and it imports 40% of its petrol. The government claims the measure was necessary in order to reduce the budget deficit. However, the timing indicates fear of further sanctions, as well as total obedience to the diktat of the International Monetary Fund.

The first night after rationing was announced, angry crowds set fire to cars, petrol stations were vandalised and a number of supermarkets and banks were attacked in Tehran. Cars were blowing their horns as protests grew and a mass reproduced text message calling for a demonstration in Vali Asr Square brought the capital’s mobile phone system to a halt.

“Guns, fireworks, tanks - Ahmadinejad should be killed,” shouted youths throwing stones at police. Reports suggest that for over 20 hours Tehran saw riots before the bassij militia and other military forces were sent in to control every petrol station and main junction. All this despite the fact that the government had announced the rationing in the evening in an attempt to minimise the reaction to yet another unpopular decision.

The protests were not limited to Tehran - similar reports came from many provincial cities, and Isfahan, Shiraz and Tabriz also saw riots. Scores of petrol stations were set on fire and there were hundreds of arrests. There are unconfirmed reports of deaths and injury, while taxi and cab drivers in Tehran are threatening to strike.

In explaining the rationing a number of points should be emphasised: first and foremost it exposed president Ahmadinejad’s empty promise of ‘justice’ and ‘bringing the benefits of oil to every Iranian’. Fuel rationing to ‘achieve realistic prices’ is a direct attack on the income of millions of impoverished Iranians, many of whom have relied on acting as cab drivers after their working day to supplement their meagre wages. It will lead to higher rates of inflation, with even higher prices for transport. There are already reports of a 20% rise in fares.

Secondly, irrespective of the vast sums that will be pocketed by smugglers and rentier capitalists associated with the regime - ie, those who control (and monopolise) petrol distribution - it is quite clear that the current rise in the price of refined fuel is a direct consequence of US-UK-imposed sanctions. As we have said in the past, it is the working class and the poor in Iran who pay for the rising costs caused by these sanctions and the current fiasco in Tehran and other major cities is just one example of what is in store.

Thirdly, distribution of cheap petrol and subsidies were for many years presented by the regime as a means of redistributing oil wealth amongst ordinary Iranians. Quite clearly the current abolition of subsidies is part of the neoliberal economic package imposed by the International Monetary Fund and that is why the ‘reformists’ and other capitalist factions of the regime have supported this latest policy of Ahmadinejad’s government. In fact we know that this policy was approved during the previous presidency of Mohammad Khatami in what was labelled by the international media as a ‘reformist’ parliament.

Finally it should be remembered that the reaction of ordinary people to this issue is a manifestation of their anger and frustration with many aspects of the regime’s policies.

High prices, low wages, rising inflation, the religious intervention in every aspect of the public and private life of Iranians (including the imposition of stricter rules for the wearing of the hijab by young women) are only part of the many reasons why most Iranians hate this regime. If it was not for the threat of war and regime change Bush-style, the islamic government would have been overthrown many months ago.

Hands Off the People of Iran has confidence in the anti-capitalist, anti-islamic opposition of workers, women, students and youth throughout Iran not only to war and sanctions, but to the reactionary policies of the mullahs. Hopi’s slogan is ‘No to imperialist war, no to the theocratic regime’.

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