Iran General NewsIran election overseers may bar former president

Iran election overseers may bar former president

-

AP: Iran’s election overseers said Monday they will bar candidates who are physically weak from running in next month’s presidential election, a reference to a former leader seen as a threat to hard-liners.
The Associated Press

By ALI AKBAR DAREINI

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran’s election overseers said Monday they will bar candidates who are physically weak from running in next month’s presidential election, a reference to a former leader seen as a threat to hard-liners.

Ex-president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani’s entry in the race scrambled the equations because of his popularity, reputation and potential to draw voters away from conservatives.

Rafsanjani is 78. Opponents claim that he is too old to run the country, and the body that must decide who can run in the June 14 election indicated it agrees – as a way of removing the threat to Iran’s hard-liners.

Abbas Ali Kadkhodaei, spokesman of the Guardian Council that vets election candidates, said the council won’t allow candidates who are limited in their physical abilities.

“If a person is able to work only few hours a day, it’s natural that he can’t be approved,” Kadkhodaei was quoted by the semi-official Mehr news agency as saying Monday.

He didn’t name any of the candidates, but it was a clear reference to Rafsanjani.

The council is expected to release its list of approved candidates on Tuesday.

The unexpected entry of Rafsanjani into the race has cut into chances of victory for a candidate loyal to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the June 14 vote.

There is also widespread speculation in Iranian media that Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s close confidant, will be barred from running.

Ahmadinejad cannot run for another term as president according to term limits under Iran’s constitution. Instead, he has been trying to ensure that a loyalist succeeds him.

Ahmadinejad has openly backed Mashaei, saying “Mashaei means Ahmadinejad, and Ahmadinejad means Mashaei.”

Hard-liners accuse Mashaei of being the leader of a “deviant current” that seeks to undermine Islamic rule and compromise the Islamic system. Some critics have even claimed he conjured black magic spells to fog Ahmadinejad’s mind.

More than 100 lawmakers have petitioned the council to bar both Rafsanjani and Mashaei from the vote.

Given Mashaei’s role in a messy power struggle between Ahmadinejad and the ruling clerics, he is likely to be barred, but Rafsanjani is seen as too respected to be disqualified.

Rafsanjani is a founder of the 1979 Islamic revolution that brought the clerics to power. He was the closest confident of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, spiritual leader of the 1979 revolution. Even Khamenei largely owes his position to Rafsanjani’s support.

“If it happens (Rafsanjani is disqualified), the foundation of the ruling system would be brought into question,” conservative lawmaker Ali Motahari, who supports Rafsanjani, was quoted by the semi-official ISNA news Monday.

But a headline on a conservative news website, alef.ir, read, “Rafsanjani on the verge of being disqualified.”

Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, head of the Guardian Council, warned Friday that those who did not distance themselves from 2009 riots were not eligible to run, referring to the popular protests over the disputed re-election of Ahmadinejad as “sedition.”

It was another hint that Rafsanjani could be banned.

A government crackdown in 2009 put an end to street protests, but Rafsanjani remained critical over the way the ruling system dealt with the crisis.

“A man who wants to sit in the president’s chair must make his position clear. If he approves the 2009 sedition, he is a seditionist. If he is against it, then he must condemn it,” Jannati told worshippers Friday. His comments were perceived as a reference to Rafsanjani.

Political analyst Saeed Leilaz said the organized campaign to discredit Rafsanjani reflects hard-liner concerns over his electoral strength.

“They are shouting because their candidates can’t beat Rafsanjani. If Rafsanjani is weak and doesn’t enjoy popular support, why are they so angry?” he said.

Latest news

Factional War Over a U.S. Agreement Spills into Iran’s Streets as Rifts Open Across Regime Factions

As reports of a final agreement between Iran's regime and the United States grow louder, signs of a deep...

The Effects of Sanctions Relief and Negotiations on Iran’s Economy

Today, Iran’s economy is simultaneously suffering from chronic inflation, declining investment, the erosion of the middle class, expanding poverty,...

Ali Khamenei’s Corpse and the Spectacle of a Dictator’s Burial

The project of burying Ali Khamenei has long been a subject of discussion among the leaders of Iran's regime....

Agreement Between Iran’s Regime and the United States Highlights a New Rift Within the Ruling Establishment

Disagreements over the course of negotiations between Tehran and Washington have once again become public. While some media outlets...

Renewed Protests Erupt in Iran

In recent days, Iran has witnessed fundamental changes in the nature of popular protests. The movement has evolved from...

Rising Crime and Social Breakdown After 47 Years of Clerical Rule in Iran

While Iran's regime has spent much of its resources and capabilities over more than four decades suppressing opponents, silencing...

Must read

Iraqi tribal leader calls for end to Iranian interference

DPA: The head of Iraq's Tribal Chiefs' Council Majid...

Iranian Yalda Night, Celebration or Economic Nightmare for Families

By Pooya Stone Shab-e Yalda is an Iranian...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you