NewsSpecial WireArabs see Iran election result as bad for Middle...

Arabs see Iran election result as bad for Middle East peace: Survey

-

Iran Focus: London, Jul. 15 – A recent survey conducted by a research and studies website run in the United Arab Emirates found that the majority of Arabs believe that the rise of ultra-conservative Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Iran’s presidency will have a negative impact on stability in the Middle East, the prominent UK-based Arabic-language website Elaph reported
yesterday. Iran Focus

London, Jul. 15 – A recent survey conducted by a research and studies website run in the United Arab Emirates found that the majority of Arabs believe that the rise of ultra-conservative Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Iran’s presidency will have a negative impact on stability in the Middle East, the prominent UK-based Arabic-language website Elaph reported yesterday.

Elaph said that the survey carried out by the Centre for Strategic Information and Studies in the UAE found that 64.91 percent of the 1,855 people interviewed thought that “the result of the recent presidential elections in Iran will negatively affect stability in the region”.

Only 25.88 percent of those surveyed said that they believed the Iranian elections would have a positive impact, while just under 10 percent offered a neutral answer.

Elaph said that the negative Arab sentiment came because of Ahmadinejad’s record as a hardliner, Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons, and in particular after recent threats by Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid-Reza Asefi, directed against Arab states.

Earlier this month, Asefi said in his weekly press conference, “The countries of this region must know that they will suffer more than us from this kind of action as the capabilities of different countries are not of the same magnitude”.

The threat came after the publication of a caricature in a Bahraini daily mocking Iran’s Supreme Leader.

In response, the Secretary-General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) sharply criticised Iran’s Foreign Ministry for using threatening language against GCC member Bahrain.

“Such remarks by this official [Asefi”> have no correlation with logic or political principals governing relations between states”, Abdur-Rahman Al-Atiya, Secretary-General of the GCC, said.

He said the Iranian Foreign Ministry’s position ran contrary to the principle of “freedom of expression, which is the primary wish of the Iranian people”.

Latest news

Details of the Execution of six PMOI Members

Following the execution of six prisoners affiliated with the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) by Iranian regime security...

International Conference Condemns Rise in Iran Executions, Voices Support for NCRI

An international conference was held near Paris on April 10 to protest the recent rise in executions in Iran....

Amnesty International: Internet Access Is a Fundamental Human Right and Must Be Restored Immediately

As Iran continues to experience one of its longest internet disruptions, Amnesty International on Friday, April 10, pointed to...

French Lawmakers in “La Tribune”: Change is in the Hands of the Iranian People, and the Resistance’s Plan is the Alternative to the “Velayat-e-Faqih”...

In a comprehensive and analytical op-ed published by the French newspaper "La Tribune Dimanche", French parliamentarians Philippe Gosselin, Christine...

Iran in A Bottleneck Over Restoring Infrastructure After Ceasefire

A few weeks after heavy U.S. and Israeli attacks, and under the shadow of a fragile ceasefire, Iran is...

U.S.–Iranian Regime Talks in Uncertainty

On the second day of the ceasefire between the United States and Iran's regime, with continued transit restrictions in...

Must read

Iran says French nuclear position sad and a hindrance

AFP: Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Tuesday that France's...

Iran – Prices Are Not Predictable Even for the Next Hour

By Pooya Stone The economic crisis in Iran has...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you