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A campaign to boycott
"substandard and expensive" Iranian-made cars has fired up social
media in the Islamic republic, where its supporters have been accused of
anti-revolutionary treason. Iranians are turning to the Internet to vent
long-simmering dissatisfaction with a domestic car industry dominated by
producers Iran Khodro and Saipa, following years of sanctions that led to the
exit of foreign makers.
Iran's
automakers "have put profit before their conscience", wrote Vali, a
user of the messaging service Telegram. "The lives of many have been lost
to technical faults."
Almost
20,000 people die on Iran's roads each year, and police say faulty cars are
partly to blame.
AFP
report continues:
Although
domestic vehicles have features such as airbags and anti-lock brakes, "the
safety of these cars is not satisfactory", deputy police chief Eskandar
Momeni said, quoted by state media.
"This
is because of a lack of competition and supervision in domestic
manufacturing," he added.
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'Wrong and sinful' -
Iranian
officials argue that domestically produced cars are much cheaper than imported
brands, and say the industry has created hundreds of thousands of jobs.
"Creating
and supporting campaigns not to buy cars is treason to the national
interests," the trade, mining and industry minister Mohammad Reza
Nematzadeh said recently, quoted by the Fars news agency.
"This
campaign is wrong and sinful and anti-revolutionary, and it would inflict
damage on the domestic economy," he said, in remarks that sparked an
online backlash.
"Imposing
substandard, expensive and unexportable cars on the nation is treason to the
people and Iran's industry," retorted Twitter user Hassan Mostafavi.
Several
newspapers also reacted furiously to Nematzadeh's comments, insisting that
people have the right to choose not to buy Iranian cars.
"The
minister, of course, did not issue a verdict for the automakers who with their
low quality products endanger the lives of people," the Ghanoon daily
said.
President
Hassan Rouhani even waded into the row to urge his minister to "treat the
critics respectfully".
Public
pressure made Mehdi Jamali, the CEO of Saipa Corp, apologise to the public on
television "for the low quality of our products in the past".
"We
have special plans to increase quality in production and support," he
said.
Most
Iranian cars are based on foreign models which used to be brought in and
assembled before sanctions were introduced.
Saipa's
Pride model, originally a Kia Motors vehicle, is the cheapest Iranian car with
a price tag of 200 million rials ($6,680 at the official exchange rate) --
about 22 times the monthly minimum wage.
Iran's
car production stood at 1.65 million vehicles in 2011 but after European and US
sanctions hit there was a dramatic drop, to around 740,000 in 2013. Production
rose to 1.2 million last year.
Almost
all foreign automakers have left the country. France's Renault continues to
import parts and assemble cars in Tehran but at a fraction of former output.
Fiat
Chrysler, Volkswagen, Mercedes-Benz and Peugeot are among those now interested
in gaining a foothold in Iran as sanctions are rolled back under a historic
nuclear deal between Tehran and major powers.
Iranian
manufacturers hope that the return of foreign partners will help them to
increase production and improve quality.
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'Economic collapse' -
Customs
duties of up to 100 percent for vehicle imports ensure that quality foreign
cars are out of reach for most Iranians.
Sales
of imported Chinese vehicles are rising, helped by price cuts after the July 14
nuclear agreement in Vienna, but even they are still much more expensive than
the average Iran-made car.
Auto
expert Saeed Laylaz believes that the stagnant economy is to blame for
difficulties in people affording cars.
"This
campaign is baseless. It's merely a reflection of the collapse of Iran's
economy," he told AFP.
People's
"hatred for automakers" results from a long period of monopoly in the
1980s and 90s that has since ended, Laylaz said.
Automaking
is Iran's number two industry after oil, accounting for up to three percent of
gross domestic product and 12 percent of jobs, he noted.
While
taxes stand at about 30 to 70 percent for domestically produced cars -- which
campaigners say is too high -- Laylaz said Iranians enjoy lower prices at the
pump than those in many countries.
"Because
the government cannot tax the fuel, like in European countries, for political
and social reasons they tax the cars upfront," he said.
"In
the West, cars are cheap but fuel is expensive, while it's vice versa in
Iran."
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