9 February, 2010         
Help AsiaNews | About us | P.I.M.E. |




Voli Low Cost Roma
Voli Milano



e-mail this to a friend printable version


» 06/11/2009 16:38
IRAN
Iranian elections heat up as outcome remains uncertain
Tensions are rising in Iran after former President Rafsanjani sent a letter to the supreme leader attacking Ahmadinejad. A Revolutionary Guards chief warns reformers whilst the only newspaper openly backing reform-minded Mousavi is shut down. Voting will take place tomorrow and results are expected on Saturday. Outcome is still uncertain.

Tehran (AsiaNews/Agencies) – Iran’s presidential election campaign has suddenly become hot just a few days before voters go to the polls. Former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, current chairman of Expediency Discernment Council, fired off a letter to the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, demanding the right to rebut charges laid against him by outgoing President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. For his part the head of the Revolutionary Guards’ Political Bureau warns reform-minded leaders against any “velvet” revolution. President Ahmadinejad is a former member of the Guard. Similarly Tehran's Prosecutor General Saeed Mortazavi banned once again Yas-e No, the only daily newspaper openly backing Mir Hossein Mousavi, Ahmadinejad’s main opponent.

All this suggest that Supreme Leader Khamenei is throwing his support behind Ahmadinejad and that Iran’s ruling circles are growing concerned that a pro-reform candidate might win as Mohammed Khatami did in 1997 when he won against the supreme leader’s preferred choice, Ayatollah Nateq-Nuri. At the time Khatami took 70 per cent of the vote but once in power he was unable to do much.

Although Khamenei has not officially said for whom he would vote, he has recently heaped praise on the current government. This is a not-so-subtle sign that that the supreme leader is backing Ahmadinejad.

In the last presidential election the outgoing president was not his first choice, but since then the two men have worked out an acceptable modus vivendi. Now both want to prevent the victory of a reformer like Mousavi.

The fact that Ahmadinejad is favoured in high places is not only confirmed by the supreme leader’s silence over Rafsanjani’s request to rebut Ahmadinejad’s charges of accusation on television, but also by a recent statement by a Revolutionary Guards leader.

The Revolutionary Guard, one of the Islamic Republic’s pillars, is closely aligned with Khamenei.

Yadollah Javani, who heads the Guards' Political Bureau, warned that anyone who tried to carry out a “velvet” revolution would see their efforts “nipped in the bud.”  

“There are many indications that some extremist [read reformist] groups are” planning a colour revolution, he said.

His message is clearing directed at Mousavi and his supporters, warning them against any idea that they might pull off what happened in Czechoslovakia in 1989 when student protests led to the peaceful (velvet) collapse of the Communist regime or in the Ukraine in 2004 when orange-clad protesters swept a pro-Russian government from power.

Mousavi supporters in fact tend to wave green scarves, handkerchiefs and flags.

Under the circumstances the publication of Rafsanjani’s letter to Khamenei, in itself an unusual event, appears to be an attempt by people at the other end of the political spectrum to affect the campaign.

Meanwhile no one is venturing to guess who will win, especially in a country of 46 million voters, half of whom under the age of 30 and six voting for the very first time.

The outcome should be known overnight on Friday.

In case no one wins an absolute majority a runoff election will be held the following Friday, 19 June.


e-mail this to a friend printable version

See also
07/16/2009 IRAN
Mousavi and Rafsanjani together for Friday prayer
06/24/2009 IRAN
Iran will not bow to pressures over elections
08/18/2009 IRAN
Iran's new head of the judiciary says he will prosecute those who torture prisoners
12/28/2009 IRAN
Tehran unrest during Ashura leaves 15 dead
07/29/2009 IRAN
Under pressure, Ahmadinejad calls for the release of demonstrators in Tehran


Dossier

Editor's choices
CHINA - VIETNAM
Wei Jingsheng: China and Vietnam, economic giants on the brink of change or collapse
by Wei JingshengThe great Chinese dissident compares the two tigers of Asian Development and warns: the domestic opposition is increasing, and is increasingly determined. Even the West is disappointed: its policy of tolerance towards human rights violations, has not led to anything, not even greater economic benefits
CHINA - USA
The heroism of Google and the fear of China
by Bernardo CervelleraObama and Hillary Clinton want to end Internet censorship. But China is not willing to loosen its grip on censorship, essential in maintaining the dictatorship of the Communist Party. Relations between the two nations at the risk, while human rights activists applaud.
VIETNAM
Brother viciously beaten in Dong Chiem, a parish under siege
by J.B. An Dang In a statement to be read in all churches until next Sunday, the archdiocese of Hanoi speaks of hundreds of police agents and soldiers forcibly blocking anyone who tries to reach the Dong Chiem parish church. Those who dare approach are threatened and can be arrested.

Books
La Cina di Mao processa la Chiesa
di Angelo S.Lazzarotto
pp. 528


Il rovescio dellemedaglie
di Bernardo Cervellera
pp. 240


Il Vescovo partigiano
EMI 2007 pp. 448
di Piero Gheddo

Missione Birmania
1867-2007 I 140 anni del Pime in Myanmar
di Piero Gheddo


Alberico Crescitelli
Martire in Cina
di Angelo S. Lazzarotto e Gianni Criveller


Clemente Vismara,
il Santo dei bambini
di Piero Gheddo


Missione Cina
Viaggio nell'Impero
tra mercato e repressione
di Bernardo Cervellera

Copyright © 2003 AsiaNews C.F. 00889190153 All rights reserved. Content on this site is made available for personal, non-commercial use only. You may not reproduce, republish, sell or otherwise distribute the content or any modified or altered versions of it without the express written permission of the editor. Photos on AsiaNews.it are largely taken from the internet and thus considered to be in the public domain. Anyone contrary to their publication need only contact the editorial office which will immediately proceed to remove the photos.