Iran General NewsIran's Rafsanjani says may stand for presidency

Iran’s Rafsanjani says may stand for presidency

-

Reuters: Iranian political heavyweight and former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani has said he is considering standing for the presidency in polls next year, according to a newspaper.
Rafsanjani, a business-minded, mid-ranking cleric would be a strong candidate for president with the likely support of Iran’s resurgent conservatives. He is also a top advisor to Iran’s most powerful figure Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Reuters

TEHRAN – Iranian political heavyweight and former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani has said he is considering standing for the presidency in polls next year, according to a newspaper.

Rafsanjani, a business-minded, mid-ranking cleric would be a strong candidate for president with the likely support of Iran’s resurgent conservatives. He is also a top advisor to Iran’s most powerful figure Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

“If there is no other suitable candidate, I will run in the next presidential elections for the sake of Islam and the revolution,” the Hambastegi daily on Saturday quoted the 70-year old as saying in a speech to students in the holy city of Qom.

“I have told the supreme leader not to order me and to let doors be opened for other candidates,” he added.

Rafsanjani had previously played down interest in running for president when reformist President Mohammad Khatami has to step down after two terms in office in the middle of next year.

Rafsanjani is seen as a pragmatic conservative whose 1989-1997 presidency was marked by modest cultural relaxations and pushes for economic restructuring.

He heads the Expediency Council, Iran’s top legislative arbitration council. The Expediency Council this month overhauled a key plank of the constitution to allow large-scale privatisations.

Although viewed as business-minded, in contrast to radical conservative parliamentarians, Rafsanjani has recently been keen to deny that he has amassed great wealth.

He has been plagued by rumours he and his proteges have huge holdings in pistachio farming, airlines and car industry. He says he is poorer now than before the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Latest news

Iranian Chamber of Commerce Reports Worsening Economic Conditions

In its latest report on the state of the Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), the Research Center of the Iranian...

Canadian Intel: Tehran’s Operations in Canada Have Become More Aggressive and Widespread

The Canadian Security Intelligence Service announced in its annual report on foreign interventions in Canada in 2023 that during...

Price of Housing in Tehran At $1,340 Per Square Meter

Despite the housing market recession, the price of housing in Tehran increased in March 2024, with the average price...

Canadian Parliament Approves Proposal to Proscribe Iran’s IRGC

On Wednesday, May 8, members of the Canadian House of Commons unanimously voted to add the IRGC to the...

Iran’s Medical Society is in Crisis

Iraj Fazel, the head of the Surgeons Society and former Minister of Health of the Iranian regime, has warned...

Iran’s Regime Evading Oil Sanctions Through Malaysia

Brian Nelson, the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, sees Iran's increased capacity to transport...

Must read

EU orders study of possible new Iran sanctions

Reuters: The European Union instructed experts on Monday to...

Rafsanjani: Iran’s Islamic revolution led to Israeli defeat

Iran Focus: Tehran, Iran, Oct. 28 – Iran’s 1979...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you

Exit mobile version