Iran has prohibited the opening of letters of credit for importing products from UAE due to the Arab country’s “illogical behaviour”, the semi-official Mehr news agency quoted a lawmaker as saying on Friday.
“Based on the government’s recent decision, opening letters of credit for imports from UAE has been banned,” parliamentarian Gholam-Reza Mesbahi-Moghaddam was quoted as saying.
While Western countries have imposed tight sanctions on trade with Iran over its disputed nuclear programme, the UAE has served as a convenient conduit for other countries’ business.
“Iran’s neighbouring countries such as UAE should resist the meaningless pressure imposed by arrogant powers so that they can continue their economic relations with the Islamic state,” Mesbahi-Moghaddam said.
According to recent data from the UAE customs authority, re-export trade between Iran and the UAE – goods sent to the UAE for on-shipment to Iran and Iranian goods sent to the UAE for on-shipment to other countries – totalled AED19.5bn ($5.3bn) in the first six months of this year, up from AED14.3bn a year earlier.
Dubai has a large community of Iranian traders.
Iranian media reported on Tuesday that the Islamic state had suspended all trade with UAE, one of its top trading partners, “until further notice” in reaction to hostile actions of the Arab country.
Iranian authorities denied the reports later that day.
International tension over Iran’s disputed nuclear ambitions has been mounting in recent months as the United States and its allies fear Iran’s atomic work is aimed at making nuclear weapons. Tehran has denied the charge, saying it only wants to generate electricity.
Sanctions imposed on Iran are meant to coerce Tehran into suspending sensitive nuclear work and negotiate seriously on a peaceful solution.