Hehehe.... orang2 Iran makan eskrim yg harganya USD 250, baru gua tau ada 
eskrim kayak gitu. 

Padahal orang2 Iran itu kebanyakan miskin sampe cewek2nya jg jual diri jadi PSK 
krn emang halal dan dianjurkan unt jadi PSK di Iran.

Kaing2nya sih si Ahmedinejad itu hidup sederhana, tp ternyata kroni2nya kaya 
raya, gua rasa termasuk jg ulama2nya. Apa mungkin si Ahmedinejad ini betul2 ga 
korupsi?



Iran’s rich eat ice cream covered in gold as poor struggle to survive  
Saturday, 06 August 2011  The Washington Post
By Thomas Erdbrink

TEHRAN — Gold-flecked ice cream wasn’t part of the picture that Shiite Muslim 
clerics painted during the Iranian Revolution, when they promised to 
lift the poor by distributing the country’s vast oil income equally 
across society.

But more than three decades later, record oil 
profits have brought in billions, and some people here are enjoying that
 decadent dessert. The trouble is, it’s just a small group of wealthy 
Iranians. Despite the promises of the revolution, many here say the gap 
between rich and poor has never seemed bigger.

Iran’s new wealthy
 class has succeeded in tapping the opportunities provided by a vast 
domestic market, sometimes aided by corruption and erratic government 
policies. It includes children of people with close connections to some 
of Iran’s rulers, as well as families of factory owners and those who 
managed to get huge loans from state banks at low interest rates. The 
trickling down of the oil windfall — nearly $500 billion over the past 
five years — has also played a central role in establishing this small 
group that is visibly enjoying its profits.

Both supporters and 
critics of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad say some of his economic 
policies designed to counter inequality are actually making things worse
 for many. And although some statistics show the gap between the Islamic
 Republic’s rich and poor has been stable over time, scenes of the rich 
flaunting their wealth have left many Iranians complaining.

The 
new wealthy are buying Porsches, getting caviar delivered to late-night 
parties, and eating $250 ice creams covered in edible gold at what’s 
billed as the highest rotating restaurant in the world. 

>From the top of Tehran’s 1,427-foot-high Milad Tower, Iran’s poor are reduced 
>to tiny dots, swarming in the streets below. 

“We
 provide a calm and luxurious atmosphere, away from Tehran’s daily 
problems,” said Ahmad Talaee, one of the owners of the Crown restaurant,
 as he received guests in the VIP section, with room for nearly 300 to 
enjoy $280 fixed-price menus, golden ice cream not included.

Construction
 workers in worn-out shoes waited in the hallway one recent afternoon to
 make final fixes at the restaurant, which opened in June, as a young 
couple in designer clothes fed each other shrimp flown in from the 
Persian Gulf. “As you can see,” the owner said, “we are re-creating the 
fairy tales of the legendary stories of ‘1,001 Nights’ right here in 
Tehran.” 

But that ritzy lifestyle, set against a backdrop of 
increasing economic hardship for millions of ordinary Iranians, is 
leading to open criticism.

People are writing open letters 
complaining about the rise in inequality. Influential conservative 
blogger Amir Hossein Sabeti wrote last month that the shift in the way 
Iranians conduct themselves in public, increasingly ignoring the 
soberness that the revolution prescribed, is a bigger threat to Iran’s 
ideology than the United States or Israel.

“How can we discuss 
decency, simplicity and support for the oppressed when we have this 
culture of ostentatiously showing off wealth?” he asked. “Woe unto us 
the day that our policies stop supporting the needy, but support the 
wealthy,” he wrote, quoting famous words from the late founder of the 
Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. 

The popular 
resentment over inequality has a strong political dimension in Iran. 
During his two election campaigns, Ahmadinejad attacked a group 
influential clerics connected to former president Ali Akbar Hashemi 
Rafsanjani, accusing them of using their positions to accumulate vast 
wealth. But some of his closest aides are also accused of corruption. 
The public attacks have left the impression that many who lead the 
country have been unable to avoid temptations to tap the vast oil wealth
 for personal use.

Iranians’ sense that they had been left out of
 the oil boom was a key factor in the downfall of Western-backed Shah 
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, experts say.

“Anger over inequality had 
been the main motivation for people to join the 1979 revolution,” said 
Hossein Raghfar, an economist who recently quit his post as an adviser 
to Ahmadinejad’s government because, he said, he disagreed with its 
policies. “But after the dust settled down, we quickly witnessed a 
marriage of power and wealth in Iran. Now we are no different from the 
United States.” 

Although Ahmadinejad declared recently that 
inequality is on the decline, Raghfar disputed government statistics. He
 also stressed that, particularly in a society so strongly based on 
ideology, perception matters a lot. Reports that some 2.5 million 
children are working rather than attending school, and, he said, even an
 increase in legal kidney sales — along with a recent price drop, from 
$10,000 to $2,000, because so many people are selling their organs for 
cash — all give people the clear idea that they are sliding into 
poverty.

The financial pressures on Iranian society can be seen 
everywhere, he said. “There is a rise in crime, prostitution and an 
underground economy thriving on corruption,” Raghfar said. “Believe me, 
this is not what we expected when we joined the revolution.” 

The
 way wealth is distributed in the Islamic Republic is a growing concern 
for Iranian leaders. In a keynote speech during Iran’s New Year 
ceremonies in March, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei urged 
officials to act, saying the disparities were intolerable and not 
accepted by Islam. 

Ahmadinejad’s 2005 campaign promise to 
establish ‘social justice’ was one of the main reasons that Khamenei 
said he supported his candidacy. But now some of the president’s 
supporters say that many of his policies meant to redistribute wealth 
have had adverse effects.

In December, Ahmadinejad implemented a 
radical overhaul of the way state subsidies are handed out. By directly 
giving the money to the poor, he said, justice would be established. At 
the same time, however, prices of food and utilities have been allowed 
to rise to market levels, at times tripling or more.

Now, more 
than 60 million of Iran’s 70 million citizens receive monthly handouts 
of $40, while inflation has risen 26 percent compared with the same 
period last year, according to figures released in July by the Iranian 
Central Bank.

Although the scheme did not lead to the popular 
unrest that many predicted, its long- term consequences are not yet 
clear. But plenty of Iranians are unhappy.

Several state-run 
newspapers printed a rare open letter in June from a housewife from a 
remote province who said she could no longer afford to feed her family.

Masoumeh
 Kamali said she voted for Ahmadinejad to help him reduce inequality. 
“But now,” she wrote, “meat has gotten so expensive that we must banish 
it from our lives. Mr. President, the increased prices have broken the 
backs of the people.” 

The official Jomhuri-e Eslami newspaper 
followed with an editorial declaring that Iranians “are tired of false 
promises, of the cost of living, poverty, unemployment and injustice.” 

At
 the Milad Tower, ordinary Iranians can buy $20 tickets to ride an 
elevator to the main observatory, with dramatic views of the capital, 
and, through tinted double glass, a close-up of the restaurant’s VIP 
section.

Inside, the expensive menu was a source of pride. “We 
work hard here,” said Talaee, as he asked a waiter to describe the ice 
cream, which also includes edible silver and caviar. “People have the 
right to do what they want with their money. That has nothing to do with
 politics.” 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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