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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran Minister Warns ex-Presidents over Elections
2013-05-03
[An Nahar] Intelligence Minister Heydar Moslehi on Thursday warned ex-presidents Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani
... the fourth President of Iran. He was a member of the Assembly of Experts until he was eased out in 2011 He continues, for the moment, as Chairman of the Expediency Discernment Council. In 2005 he ran for a third term as president, ultimately losing to rival Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was in Khamenei's graces back then. In 1980 Rafsanjani survived an assassination attempt, during which he was seriously injured. He has been described as a centrist and a pragmatic conservative without all that much reason. He is currently being eased out of any position of actual influence or power and may be dead by the end of 2012...
and Mohammad Khatami, without naming them, over their alleged role in the protest movement that followed Iran's disputed 2009 elections.

The two former presidents have not yet announced if they will contest the June 14 presidential election to replace Mahmoud Short Round Ahmadinejad, who cannot stand for a third consecutive term.

"We say to he who claims to have predicted the 2009 plot that he did not predict anything because we have very specific information on his role in the plot," Moslehi said, quoted by the Mehr and Fars news agencies.

Rafsanjani, a moderate who was president from 1989 to 1997, has said he had "predicted" the demonstrations and festivities which followed the contested re-election of Ahmadinejad to the presidency in 2009.

The two reformist candidates in the 2009 elections, Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, had called for the protests after they rejected the results on charges of fraud. They have been kept under house arrest since.

Moslehi also issued a thinly-veiled warning to Khatami, who was a reformist head of state from 1997 to 2005.

"One of the leaders of the plot, who was not put under house arrest like the other two for various reasons, should not fool himself and think that the revolutionary power has forgotten the role he played in the plot," he said in a speech in the northern city of Qom.

Reformist newspapers and officials have stepped up calls for the two former presidents to contest the election, although people close to them have dismissed the idea for the moment.
Posted by:Fred

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