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Iran
Iran leader threatens mass resignations
2004-01-14
Iran’s reformist president has escalated his battle with hardline clerics by threatening the resignation of his entire administration. Mohammad Khatami said his government would "go together" if a ban on reformist candidates standing in next month’s election was not lifted. He described the ruling as biased - his toughest pronouncement yet, says the BBC’s Jim Muir in Tehran. But the president said he was hopeful that talks could solve the crisis.

The conservative Guardian Council of black hats - which vets candidates - is now considering appeals against its own veto of more than 3,000 would-be candidates. Of those, about 80 are sitting members of parliament. The Council - empowered to ensure parliament’s actions comply with Radical Islamic principles - says it will not yield to pressure in its consideration of appeals.

Reformist officials had already made clear that several ministers, lawmakers and advisers would resign if the ban was upheld. But on Tuesday President Khatami said his administration would resign en masse. "We will go together or we will stay together," he said. "At this stage, my historic mission is to prevent the illegal seizing of the levers of power." But he also said he was "not despairing", and that results could be achieved if consultations continued, and if the standards laid down by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei were adhered to. Ayatollah Khamenei has said the controversy must be resolved through legal channels.
Any guess who controls the ’legal channels"?
The Guardian Council affirmed that it would do so, the official IRNA news agency quoted spokesman Mohammad Jahromi as saying. But he also warned that the council would not be moved by "pressure or commotion". Following legal procedure means disputes continuing for more than two weeks until the results of the reconsideration are known. It is a tug-of-war in which both sides are trying to maximise their pressure on the appeals process. The government is dominated by reformists, and their mass resignation would see almost all democratically elected officials out of office ahead of the elections on 20 February. At least 80 reformist deputies are continuing a sit-in inside the Iranian parliament, where the tension has boiled over into occasional fist-fights. Among those banned from putting their name on ballots are Mohammad Reza Khatami, the younger brother of the president
and his wife
and Behzad Nabavi - who are both deputy speakers of parliament.
Posted by:CrazyFool

#6  I would have sent blueprints for adobe igloos - but that's just me.
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-1-14 1:30:38 PM  

#5  Kind of makes on wonder what other messages were sent over w/our humanitarian aid. Wait until the Marines return in March?
Posted by: Anonymous2U   2004-1-14 12:42:25 PM  

#4  Turn da mullahs out!
Turn da mullahs out...
Posted by: TheGapBand   2004-1-14 12:04:05 PM  

#3  Be interesting if they could get somone to go all VonStauffenberg on them, and go 'splodey kill the Black Turban cabal.
Posted by: OldSpook   2004-1-14 2:41:17 AM  

#2  Be a real shame if the Guardian Council got all blowed up, wouldn't it?
Posted by: mojo   2004-1-14 12:48:33 AM  

#1  A mass resignation would be a call! Will Iranians be up to their tea party?
Posted by: Lucky   2004-1-14 12:37:19 AM  

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