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More precious than oil: Iranian Exiles returning home

Surenas

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Xanyar Kamangar feared he was out of luck. Due to fly from London to Tehran last month to host foreign investors, he had lost his Iranian passport. A new one would take seven weeks.

The consul general agreed to see the 39-year-old, who had left a career with Deutsche Bank AG to co-found a Tehran-based investment firm, believing his native country would soon open for business after years of sanctions and isolation.

“The consul called his aide and said ‘Let’s help this young man help the country,’” Kamangar recalled. “The passport was issued in 16 minutes.”

For years after the 1979 revolution, Iranians who left were dismissed as traitors and those who returned often treated as outsiders. Hundreds of thousands moved to southern California, dubbed their new city Tehrangeles, and didn’t look back.

But following the 2013 election of President Hassan Rouhani, a moderate, and his government’s success in reaching a nuclear accord with world powers last month aimed at lifting international sanctions, a shift has begun.

Rouhani has made a point of saying the government “extends its hands” to the diaspora, considers overseas Iranians “assets” and called for regulations to facilitate their return. Iranians are responding -- going back not only to visit but also to invest and even settle.

There is clear evidence of this in Iranian consulates, where revenue in this year’s budget “has doubled even compared to last year,” Deputy Foreign Minister Hassan Ghashghavi said in an interview in his Tehran office.

Seven Million Abroad

The government estimates that as many as 7 million Iranians live abroad and that the sum of their direct assets or assets they manage is $2 trillion, Ghashghavi said.

The government has issued orders to simplify the bureaucracy for returning Iranians, accepting proof of nationality rather than insisting on a valid passport, Ghashghavi said.

The foreign ministry also has set up an e-mail service to allay fears of those who don’t know if they will be welcomed back, he said, adding that each case is reviewed with various government agencies and a clear assessment given.

“Many think because they left at the beginning of the revolution or during the years of war they would be questioned as to why they left,” he said. “It is not so; this is an illusion, an unfounded fear. Ninety-five percent of Iranians would have no problem travelling back and forth.”

Iranians abroad nonetheless remain cautious about returning. Some worry that they can’t count on such assurances or that competing entities inside the country, like the Revolutionary Guards, might not listen to the ministry.

Supreme Leader Agrees

The decision to attract those in the diaspora is backed by the highest authority, however. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country’s supreme leader, issued orders in June to lure Iranians’ investments through “incentives” and create a “foundation to attract the expertise and scientific capability of the diaspora towards national growth.”

Ali Zuashkiani says he is witnessing a “wave of return.” He co-founded the Tehran-based International Association of Iranian Managers, a networking initiative bringing together Iranian professionals inside the country and abroad.

“Many are contacting us saying, ‘We want to return, help us, connect us’ and we do it,” Zuashkiani said. “I’m seeing cases of packing up and returning every other month.”

Sina Sohangir is an example. The 39-year-old sold his U.S. startup and left northern California a year ago. An electrical engineer with a Ph.D. from Stanford, he had worked for Netseer Inc., an online advertising analytics company, and for Twitter Inc.

Promising Market

“Iran is at a stage where it’s going to take a leap, it’s going to see much growth, a lot can be done and I thought it was a good time for me to return,” he said. Since coming back 11 months ago, Sohangir has started AdPardaz, which employs four and advertises on mobile games and apps.

As a market, Iran seems to offer a great deal of promise. Some 55 percent of Iranians are connected to the Internet, smartphone usage has become common and about half the population is 20 to 35 years old.

Sohangir said it was relatively easy to recruit staff but also pointed to frustrations that range from heavy traffic and deadly pollution in a city of 12 million to a work culture that can lack efficiency.

“Coming from Silicon Valley, everything there is very fast-paced, but in Iran it’s very slow,” he said. “One of the things I had to work hard to get used to is that something you think would take two weeks can easily take two months.”

Work culture and efficiency are precisely areas where the Iranian diaspora can make a difference, says Zuashkiani, 37, who lives in Tehran with his wife after 11 years in Canada.

Creating Opportunities

“If there were 50, 100 people like me entering at the same time in one sector we can bring dynamism and change the business atmosphere of the country, modernize the regulations, make reforms,” he said, adding that when multinationals return, that also will create opportunities.

The challenge is enormous. Iran has had one of the highest rates of brain drain in the world: Some 5,600 go annually to the U.S. for studies, according to a 2011 report by the Institute for International Education. A 2012 survey by the Washington D.C.-based National Science Foundation said 89 percent of Iranian doctoral students remain in the U.S. after graduation.

But that may change as more pathways open for Iranians to reconnect with their country.

Rouzbeh Pirouz, executive chairman of Turquoise Partners, the leading Iranian asset-management firm, said about a fifth of those contacting him about investing in the country are Iranians. And that makes him optimistic.

“The Iranian diaspora is a greater resource for the country even than oil,” he said, adding that Iranians seem more willing to put aside their differences. “We had a generational change, both inside and outside. The younger ones don’t even remember the revolution, and the older ones realize that it’s time to move on.”

Iranian Exiles Are Having Second Thoughts - Bloomberg Business
 
Xanyar Kamangar feared he was out of luck. Due to fly from London to Tehran last month to host foreign investors, he had lost his Iranian passport. A new one would take seven weeks.

The consul general agreed to see the 39-year-old, who had left a career with Deutsche Bank AG to co-found a Tehran-based investment firm, believing his native country would soon open for business after years of sanctions and isolation.

“The consul called his aide and said ‘Let’s help this young man help the country,’” Kamangar recalled. “The passport was issued in 16 minutes.”

Even a normal renewal of passport usually took 2 or 3 weeks and if you had lost the damn thing then you would have to wait for months completely stranded, and this was if you were lucky. Otherwise sometimes they pushed to give you just a "travel document" (not a passport just a piece of paper), to return to Iran and then apply for passport there. Situation has improved a bit but still needs to improve more. The consuls should help the people in anyway they can, not making them miserable.
 
Don't call everybody exiles please. My dad was sentences to a quite long jail term and managed to bribe himself out/escape. No, he wasn't a criminal, just a frigging dissident/communist IDIOT (he is so sorry now).Many others just 'didn't like the new culture', many others had their huge wealth nationalized (doesn't force you to flee) etc. So calling people who left without fleeing 'exiles' is stupid. You're only an exile if you HAD to gtfo of there. Anyway, good to see brainy Iranians return. One of the most important 'natural resources' of a country is it's people.
 
Don't call everybody exiles please. My dad was sentences to a quite long jail term and managed to bribe himself out/escape. No, he wasn't a criminal, just a frigging dissident/communist IDIOT (he is so sorry now).Many others just 'didn't like the new culture', many others had their huge wealth nationalized (doesn't force you to flee) etc. So calling people who left without fleeing 'exiles' is stupid. You're only an exile if you HAD to gtfo of there. Anyway, good to see brainy Iranians return. One of the most important 'natural resources' of a country is it's people.
Agree. For some reason western people like to think of all Iranians living abroad as exiles.
 
Even a normal renewal of passport usually took 2 or 3 weeks and if you had lost the damn thing then you would have to wait for months completely stranded, and this was if you were lucky. Otherwise sometimes they pushed to give you just a "travel document" (not a passport just a piece of paper), to return to Iran and then apply for passport there. Situation has improved a bit but still needs to improve more. The consuls should help the people in anyway they can, not making them miserable.
Yes you're right... but things have slowly started to change... now not only a passport but any other paper work is done through private managed offices called "Dafatere khadamate dolati" and the famous "Police +10 centers". you might remember days in which a simple paper work used to take months... days that issuing your dirve license needed to go to human lines in kms... today such services is fairly better handled in Iran. Electronic services are enhanced too... one of my friends wanted to approve his academic record in related ministry... he has done it once years ago, saying it was a nightmare, while this time he simply filled forms online and post did the rest...

Regarding the consulates I have personal encounter with them regarding one of my close relatives stuck in a problem in Germany, frankfurt consulate. He and his family needed to get Iranian documents as they left them years ago. They were desperate by German authorities, so the consulate asked them to come to refuge in consulate overnight...then they issues IDs and travel docs overnight, make them board a flight early morning and leave Germany... That was a very extra ordinary help they received... Although in emergencies the consulates are good but they have to help more in normal conditions too... I suspect this delays are due to exceptional Iranian situation with so many enemies and security issues...so I don't blame them to think twice before issuing any papers for diaspora who left IRan on mostly political grounds
 
Lucky guy, once I wanted to get a passport and what was needed of me to go and bring them a clean criminal records. When I went there I saw a line as wide as 6m and as long as 40m as a result I still don't have passport.
 
Lucky guy, once I wanted to get a passport and what was needed of me to go and bring them a clean criminal records. When I went there I saw a line as wide as 6m and as long as 40m as a result I still don't have passport.

Did you go to a Police +10 center? If so, go to a different Police +10 center. There are so many in the city, and I bet you can find ones that are not busy.
 
Did you go to a Police +10 center? If so, go to a different Police +10 center. There are so many in the city, and I bet you can find ones that are not busy.
when i wanted to get the passport you didn't go to Police+10 at the time you must have gone to a police station .
 
when i wanted to get the passport you didn't go to Police+10 at the time you must have gone to a police station .

Nowadays you can do it in Police +10.
Here is what you need for renewal,
درگاه خدمات الکترونیک انتظامی: مدارک لازم جهت صدور گذرنامه

And here is where you can search to find one nearest to you,
دفاتر پليس + 10
However, don't be surprised if the search sucks.
 
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