Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09ASHGABAT1292
2009-10-14 09:02:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Ashgabat
Cable title:  

IRANIAN IMPORTER ON "HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS IN

Tags:  BTIO IR TX PGOV PREL 
pdf how-to read a cable
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INFO RUCNCLS/ALL SOUTH AND CENTRAL ASIA COLLECTIVE
RUCNCIS/CIS COLLECTIVE
RUCNMEM/EU MEMBER STATES COLLECTIVE
RUCNIRA/IRAN COLLECTIVE
RUEHAK/AMEMBASSY ANKARA 5776
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RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHDC
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C O N F I D E N T I A L ASHGABAT 001292 

SIPDIS

STATE FOR NEA/IR AND SCA/CEN

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/13/2019
TAGS: BTIO IR TX PGOV PREL
SUBJECT: IRANIAN IMPORTER ON "HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS IN
TURKMENISTAN"

Classified By: Charge d'Affaires Sylvia Reed Curran. Reasons: 1.4 (b) a
nd (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L ASHGABAT 001292

SIPDIS

STATE FOR NEA/IR AND SCA/CEN

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/13/2019
TAGS: BTIO IR TX PGOV PREL
SUBJECT: IRANIAN IMPORTER ON "HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS IN
TURKMENISTAN"

Classified By: Charge d'Affaires Sylvia Reed Curran. Reasons: 1.4 (b) a
nd (d).


1. (C) In an October 8 meeting with Iran Watcher, an Iranian
ceramics importer shared his views on how to succeed --
despite the many well-known impediments -- as an entrepreneur
in Turkmenistan. In a conversation in his office at the Iran
Business Center, an attractive building dominated mostly by
the offices of Iran Khodro, Abbas Mehrabian described how he
has spent the past 15 years building his ceramics import
business. He is now the biggest ceramic tile importer in the
country, with agents in all five provinces of Turkmenistan.

RENOVATION MANIA


2. (C) Mehrabian, a slender, soft-spoken man, described how
he left Iran in the late 1980's to join a brother in Austria,
applied (unsuccessfully) for a U.S. visa in Vienna, and then
in 1993, saw a program on television about the former USSR
and the flood of small businesses that people were setting up
all over the region. He decided to come to Turkmenistan.
His first undertaking was a small ice cream factory, which he
built up and later sold. He noted a "remodeling craze" had
taken hold in Turkmenistan following the break-up of the
USSR, where apartment dwellers had been granted permanent
occupancy (but not ownership) rights to their homes and began
making significant improvements, particularly the kitchens
and bathrooms. He noted the style and colors of ceramic
tiles that Turkmen prefer, and began to import them from a
factory in Iran. He now uses three main suppliers, in
Tehran, Tabriz and Isfahan, and last year did several hundred
thousand dollars in sales, claiming to have "no real
competition" in his sector. (NOTE: Judging from the pace at
which Turkmen continue to remodel their apartments, he is
unlikely to face a lack of demand anytime soon. END NOTE.)

THE SECRET? PATIENCE, PATIENCE AND MORE PATIENCE


3. (C) Mehrabian said that he would have given up long ago
were he not extraordinarily patient by nature. He credited
his decision to register his firm (with a partner) as a
Turkmen, not Iranian, company as having been very helpful,
relieving him of many of the bureaucratic delays and
requirements imposed on foreign firms. He has worked around
the lack of a banking system, the absence of various forms of
commercial paper such as checks and letters of credit, by
paying Iranian suppliers in cash, or devising informal credit
arrangments with them. Although he is married to a Turkmen
citizen, he cannot obtain Turkmen citizenship (there is no
petitioning process in Turkmenistan whereby spouses may
apply),and must renew his visa every six months. He said
that during the past 15 years, he has only once encountered
problems renewing his visa.


4. (C) COMMENT: Mehrabian is funding his step-daughter's
university studies. She plans to study in San Jose, CA and
was recently issued a student visa. He said that she first
proposed studying in Russia, but he told her not to consider
higher education "anywhere but in the U.S." He called
himself a "huge fan" of the U.S. and President Obama.
On the subject of Iran, he said the same patience that
brought him success in Turkmenistan will ultimately allow the
Iranian people to prevail and regain the civil and political
freedoms they desire. He said that "the rulers of Iran are
all elderly and won't be around forever. Once they are gone,
the younger generation will prevail and things will change
for the better." END COMMENT.
CURRAN