Iran hints at Rafsanjani rejection

Iran’s electoral watchdog said yesterday it would bar physically feeble candidates from running for president, in an apparent hint that it could disqualify 78-year-old former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani from the race. Rafsanjani, if he is...

Iran’s electoral watchdog said yesterday it would bar physically feeble candidates from running for president, in an apparent hint that it could disqualify 78-year-old former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani from the race.

How do they know whether Hashemi can run the country or not?

Rafsanjani, if he is allowed to run, would be a significant challenge to conservative hardliners who are ultra-loyal to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and who otherwise dominate the field for the June 14 presiden-tial election.

The wily, pragmatic cleric, who has often been close to the heart of power since Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution, shook up the election contest earlier this month when he joined the race.

But the Guardian Council, a conservative body of clerics and jurists that vets all candidates, may disqualify him, along with Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie, a close ally of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

“If an individual who wants to take up a high post can only perform a few hours of work each day, naturally that person cannot be confirmed,” Guardian Council spokesman Abbas Ali Kadkhodai said yesterday, according to the Isna news agency.

Kadkhodai did not name Rafsanjani. The council is due to present a final list of approved candidates today to the Interior Ministry, which then has two days to announce it.

Hardline legislators demanded last week that Rafsanjani and Mashaie be banned from running.

Rafsanjani earned hardliners’ ire for criticising the crackdown on opposition protests after Ahmadinejad was re-elected in 2009 in a vote that reformists said was rigged.

Conservatives are suspicious of Mashaie, saying he holds an unorthodox view of Islam and seeks to sideline clerical rule.

Lawmaker Ali Motahari, who is close to Rafsanjani, told reporters yesterday that a rejection of Rafsanjani’s candidacy would put the very principles of the state under question, “because Hashemi (Rafsanjani) had the biggest role in the Islamic revolution”, according to the Ilna news agency.

Motahari derided the idea that Rafsanjani was too old, asking: “How do they know whether Hashemi can run the country or not?”

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