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DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES —Iran's judicial authorities reportedly banned a newspaper Monday for publishing a front-page graphic that appeared to show Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's hand drawing the poverty line in the Islamic Republic, amid widespread anger over the nation's cratering economy.
The semiofficial Mehr news agency said that Iran's media supervisory body shut down the daily newspaper Kelid after it published a front-page article titled, "Millions of Iranians Living under Poverty Line" on Saturday.
Under the headline, a graphic showed a person's left hand holding a pen and drawing a red line across the page as silhouettes of people underneath reached up to the line.
The graphic resembled an earlier image of Khamenei writing on a piece of paper with his left hand, a prominent ring on one of his fingers. His right has been paralyzed since a 1981 bombing.
The Young Journalists Club, a group associated with state television, earlier reported that censors were examining the newspaper after the publication. The state-run IRNA news agency acknowledged Kelid had been shut down, without explaining the reason for the decision.
Kelid could not immediately respond to a request for comment on Monday. Their website has been taken offline.
Iran, whose state-dominated economy has long faced trouble since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, has been under increased pressure since former President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew America from Tehran's nuclear deal with world powers in 2018.
The Iranian rial is now about 281,500 to the dollar - compared with 32,000 rials for $1 at the time when the 2015 nuclear deal was struck. With U.S. sanctions still strangling the economy, record-breaking inflation has hit ordinary Iranians where it hurts most. Shoppers are cutting meat and dairy from their diets, buying less and less each month.
While radio and television stations in Iran are all state-controlled, newspapers and magazines can be owned and published by private individuals. Iranian journalists, however, face constant harassment and the threat of arrest in the country, according to press advocacy groups.