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Based in Tehran, the accelerator will provide tourism startups with financial support, shared working place, and legal and financial counseling. The accelerator will also help startups write business and marketing strategy, Cultural Heritage and Tourism News website (CHTN.ir) reported.
On its website (sisootech.com), the accelerator has announced that it is willing to support all startups —developed or seed-stage — in the fields of tourism, cultural heritage and handicrafts.
Deputy director of RICHT, Alireza Qolinejad, referred to the environmental crises like soil degradation and water scarcity in rural areas that have endangered livelihoods, Financial Tribune reported.
“Rural folks whose main source of income is from agriculture, are forced to leave their homes and move to less water-stressed regions. With such migration patterns, the historical and cultural heritage of these areas is suffering.”
The accelerator seeks to commercialize innovative ideas in different fields, especially tourism, help lift rural economies and propose new income sources that would replace agriculture, “hoping to make life a bit easier for them.”
One of the important aims is to help curb the migration from rural to urban areas that is emerging as a new challenge for the government.
Head of the Art and Cultural Organization of Tehran Municipality, Saeid Ohaddi took stock of the under-developed tourism infrastructure and said although promotion of tourism infrastructure is a government responsibility, startups can and should help find workable solutions.
The TM is willing to support the accelerators that can contribute to the growth of firms active in the tourism industry, he said.
Promoting knowledge-based companies and startups has been on President Hassan Rouhani’s agenda since he first took office in 2013.
The head of the Iran-China Friendship Association Alaeddin Boroujerdi emphasized that Tehran does not have any restrictions on the development of relations between the two countries, and that there is ample room for increasing cooperation in various fields.
Turkey is interested in buying more gas from Iran, said the director general of the Mediterranean and Eastern Europe department of the Foreign Ministry, adding that transit of Iranian gas to Eastern Europe through Turkey is possible.
Most of us have a bottle of olive oil sitting in our cupboards — perfect for use in a salad dressing or stir-fry. It’s likely that most people haven’t considered using it for anything other than enhancing their dinner.
Head of the Study, Monitoring and Market Development Office of the Central Organization of Rural Cooperatives of Iran says 21 metric tons of Iranian saffron worth $207,786,281 were directly exported to 55 countries in the Iranian calendar year ending in late March.
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