Middle-east Arab News Opinion | Asharq Al-awsat

Campaigning ends in Iran”s tight presidential race | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
Select Page
Media ID: 55289602
Caption:

Iranian presidential hopeful Ali Akbar Rafsanjani listens to speeches by supporters at the Expediency Council in Tehran,15 June 2005, (EPA)


Iranian presidential hopeful Ali Akbar Rafsanjani listens to speeches by supporters at the Expediency Council in Tehran,15 June 2005, (EPA)

Iranian presidential hopeful Ali Akbar Rafsanjani listens to speeches by supporters at the Expediency Council in Tehran,15 June 2005, (EPA)

TEHRAN (Reuters)-Campaigning in Iran”s tight presidential race ended on Thursday with moderate cleric Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani leading a pack of seven but unlikely to secure enough support to avert an unprecedented run-off vote.

Rival young campaigners came together and clogged the capital”s streets into the early morning in a final bid to win over undecided voters before Friday”s election.

The vote could determine the fate of Iran”s nuclear stand-off with the West and ties with arch-foe the United States, although whoever wins, real power in the country will still rest with conservative, anti-West religious authorities.

Hardline candidate Mohsen Rezaie pulled out on Wednesday after trailing near the bottom of polls. His move is likely to strengthen the remaining three hardline candidates, but they still lag behind Rafsanjani, who wants closer ties with the West.

Rafsanjani, 70, looks unlikely to win the necessary 50 percent to avoid a run-off between the top two candidates, possibly on June 24.

His main rivals, opinion polls show, are conservative former police chief Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf and reformist Mostafa Moin, an education minister under outgoing President Mohammad Khatami.

Such polls have not always been reliable in past elections.

&#34I came to campaign for Hashemi (Rafsanjani), to say that he has a heart of gold,&#34 said 22-year-old student Mohsen Mahmoudi, his face plastered with campaign stickers as he joined thousands of other youths waving posters or handing out campaign cards.

FUN SEEKERS, NOT VOTERS

But some young revelers said they had only come out onto the streets to enjoy a rare chance to party and mingle openly between the sexes.

Several said they would not vote in a race where most of the more than 1,000 hopefuls who registered to run were barred by the hardline Guardian Council supervisory body.

&#34We don”t get any fun. We came here because tonight the police will not touch us. Anyone who votes accepts the Islamic Republic,&#34 said Mehdi, a 23-year-old student, who added over the din of music blaring from passing cars that he would not vote.

Candidates have sought to win over the young, a key constituency in the world”s fourth-largest oil exporter where half the population is under 25. Candidates have promised to create more jobs and allow more social freedoms.

Supporters of Moin have complained of beatings by hard-liners during more than two weeks of campaigning, prompting the president to call for action against those responsible.

&#34I ask you to identify those offenders and introduce them to the judiciary more seriously and more quickly,&#34 Khatami said in a letter to the Interior and Intelligence Ministries, Iran”s student ISNA news agency reported.

Reformist Khatami, who is not allowed to stand for a third four-year term, was elected by landslides in 1997 and 2001 with pledges to make a freer society, but his reforms were repeatedly blocked by hard-liners who control the courts and supervisory bodies.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the last word in matters of state in Iran”s theocratic system, has called for a high turnout, saying it would make Iran &#34immune to the enemies” plots.&#34

Iran has 47 million voters and a minimum voting age of 15.

&#34The presidential election turnout will definitely be more than 50 percent,&#34 said Interior Minister Abdolvahed Mousavi-Lari. There is no minimum turnout needed to make the election valid.

Mostafa Moin,a leading reformist candidate in Iran's presidential elections,waves at his supporters from his bus during his campaign rally northeast of Tehran, 15 June 2005 (AP)

Mostafa Moin,a leading reformist candidate in Iran’s presidential elections,waves at his supporters from his bus during his campaign rally northeast of Tehran, 15 June 2005 (AP)

Young Iranian supporters of presidential candidate Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani attend a campaign rally meeting in Tehran,15 June 2005 (EPA)

Young Iranian supporters of presidential candidate Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani attend a campaign rally meeting in Tehran,15 June 2005 (EPA)