
Dubai, United Arab Emirates (AP) – as Iranian sick economy reinforced on Saturday Repetition of UN sanctions Based on their nuclear program, they are ordinary people who are increasingly finding food prices they need to survive and fear their future.
Iranian rial currency already sitting on a record low levelIncreasing pressure on food prices and everyday life is so more demanding. This includes meat, rice and other clamps of the Iranian dining table.
Meanwhile, people are afraid of a new round of fighting between Iran and Israel-A also potentially United States-because the missile sites hit during the 12-day war in June now seems to be rebuilt.
Activists are afraid of growing wave of repression Within the Islamic Republic, which has allegedly executed more people than in the last three decades this year.
Sina, the father of a twelve -year -old boy who spoke on condition that only his first name would be used for fear of consequences, said that the Earth had never become such a demanding time, even during the deprivation of the war in Iran and Iraq and for decades of sanctions that came later.
“As long as I remember, we fought with economic problems and it is worse every year than the last one,” said Sina Associated Press. “For my generation is always too late or too early – our dreams will slip away.”
Soon Sunday at 0000 GMT (20:00 Eastern), with the exception of any diplomatic breakthrough at the last minute, UN sanctions for Iran will be re -stored “Snapback” because the mechanism is called diplomats who negotiated it to Iranian nuclear agreements with world powers. Snapback was designed to be a volatile resistant to the UN Security Council, which means that China and Russia cannot stop it itself, because in the past they have further proposed steps against Tehran.
The measures will again freeze Iranian assets abroad, stop weapons with Tehran and penalize any development of the Iranian ballistic missile program, among other things.
France, Germany and the United Kingdom launched Snapback Through Iran, it further reduces the monitoring of its nuclear program and blocking in its negotiations with the USA
Iran also withdrew from the international monitoring of the Association of Atomic Energy Association after the War of Israel in the country in June, which also recorded US nuclear places in the Islamic Republic. Meanwhile, the country still maintains a uranium supply, which has enriched 60% of cleanliness-short, a technical step from the levels of weapons 90%-this is largely to produce several atomic bombs if Tehran decides to rush towards weapons.
Iran Long insisted that his nuclear program was peaceful, although the West and Iaea claim that Tehran had organized organized weapons by 2003.
Tehran further claimed that three European nations should not be permitted to implement a snapback that partially aimed to America Simple resignation from the 2018 Agreement in the first administration of President Donald Trump.
“Trump’s administration seems to think he has stronger hand blows, and he can wait for Iran to return to the table,” said Kelsey Davenport, a nuclear expert on Washington Association. “Given the knowledge, Iran has a very dangerous assumption due to the materials that remain in Iran.”
Risks also remain for Iran, adding: “In the short term, the IAEA kick increases the risk of incorrect calculation. US or Israel could use lack of inspections as an excuse for further strikes.”
The consequences of the June War in Iran have increased food prices and eliminated the already expensive meat of reach for poorer families.
In June, the Iranian government set a total annual inflation at 34.5% and its statistical center said the cost of basic foods increased by 50% over the same period. But even that does not reflect what people see in stores. Pinto beans tripled in the year, while the butter almost doubled. Rice, clamp, on average increased by more than 80% and hit 100% behind premium varieties. The whole chicken is 26%, while beer and lamb are 9%.
“Every day I see new higher prices for cheese, milk and butter,” said Sima Taghavi, mother of two, in Tehran food facility. “I can’t omit them as fruit and meat from my food list because my children are too young to get rid of.”
Since June, more patients heading towards psychologists have seen the pressure on food and concerns about war renewal, the local media in Iran reported.
“Psychological pressure from the 12 -day war on the one hand and the escape of inflation and the prices on the other left society exhausted and unmotivated,” Dr. Sima Ferdowsi, clinical psychologist and professor at Shahid Beheshti University, Hamshahri newspaper in July.
“If the economic situation continues like this, it will have serious social and moral consequences,” she warned, noticing the newspaper, “People can do things that they normally never mean to survive.”
In recent years, Iran has faced several national protests, supported by anger over the economy, demands for women’s rights, and calling for a change in the theocracy of the country. The latest came in 2022 over the death of Mahsy amini, a young woman who died after she was reportedly detained by the police for not carrying her hijab or scarf according to their wishes.
In response to these protests and the June War Iran since 1988, when at the end of the war Iran-Iran executed thousands, he executed the prisoners. A group of human rights based in Oslo and Washington based in Washington Abdorrahman Boroumand for Human Rights in Iran said the number of people executed in 2025 to more than 1,000, noting that the number could be higher because Iran does not report every performance.
“Political and civic space in Iran has diminished to nothing, and outside Iran, activists face civil society and dissidents of multinational repression,” the center warned. “The Iranian people, millions of whom they strive for more than a closed and brutal theocracy, have tried every possibility within reach. Their leaders do not.”
Vahdat informed from Tehran in Iran. The writer Associated Press Nasser Karimi in Tehran contributed to this report. ___
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