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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Hundreds Withdraw From Iranian Elections
2004-02-14
More than 500 liberal-leaning candidates have withdrawn from legislative elections next week, the Interior Ministry said Saturday, apparently to protest the disqualification of thousands of reformist contenders by Iran’s hard-line clerics.
This in addition to the couple thousand who were disqualified.
The candidates, who are not affiliated with any party, join a boycott by reformist parties of the Friday elections in which nearly all of the 5,600 candidates are hard-liners certain to win amid expected low-voter turnout. "So far, 550 candidates have withdrawn from the elections," the Islamic nation’s ministry said in a statement posted on its Web site, without giving a reason for the withdrawals. The election furor - Iran’s worst political crisis in decades - began when the clerics of the Guardian Council banned more than 2,400 candidates, nearly of them supporters of efforts to expand Western-style democracy and loosen strict interpretations of Islamic codes in areas such as social activities and the media. The council, lead by Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, reinstated about 1,100 candidates after sit-ins and protests by liberal politicians and backers. The rest remained blackballed - all leading reformists, including 80 sitting lawmakers. That left only minor liberal contenders on the ballot, and many of them have since dropped out. "I was approved on the basis of the (supreme) leader’s order and not according to defined legal procedure," said former candidate Aboulfazl Raouf. "I see this against my dignity as an Iranian citizen."
A politican with a backbone! Too bad, he ought to be elected.
Another candidate who dropped out was Ali Akbar Mohtashamipour, a former interior minister and hard-liner-turned-reformer. Mohtashamipour belongs to the Militant Clerics Association, the only reformist clerical party running in the elections. He could not be reached for comment Saturday. In the absence of any rivals, conservatives are expected to easily win.
Subtle, they ain't...
The biggest challenge will likely be persuading apathetic and disillusioned citizens to vote in an election seen as flawed and undemocratic. A government survey predicted that only about 30 percent of 46 million eligible voters would take part in the polls.
Tough to sell that as a real election.
In 2000, parliament elections drew more than 67 percent of voters when reformers took control of the 290-seat chamber for the first time since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. On Friday, the ayatollah urged a high turnout in the elections to give "a slap in the face" to pro-reform groups and others calling for a boycott. A sharp drop in voter turnout would be widely interpreted as a powerful sign of support for reformers.
Not that such a thing will lead to the next step.
Posted by:Steve White

#2  Unfortunately, the difference between reformers and hard-liners in Iran is like the difference between shades of black.

Look for a lot of hard-ball tactics to get an 'impressive' turnout.
Posted by: Pappy   2004-2-14 3:33:16 PM  

#1  The story sounds great - a real and very public protest by these brave dead reformers...

But the Black Hats will be the ones who'll count the votes. Want a big turnout? Hey, no sweat, they'll give you big numbers - there's nothing to tweaking numbers when you run the show in the back room.

Think there will be any Int'l monitoring which will catch them? Nawww, me neither. Think there will be an Int'l outcry if the view on the ground doesn't match the number they spew? Nawww, me neither.

We have only these soon-to-be-killed candidates, and I mean it this time when I add, "May peace be upon them."
Posted by: .com   2004-2-14 12:52:42 PM  

00:00