Kuwait Times

Ahmadineja­d to run for president in shock move

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Iran’s former hardline president Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d took the shock move yesterday of registerin­g for next month’s presidenti­al election, going against the advice of the supreme leader. Ahmadineja­d had previously insisted he would not stand after Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said last year that his candidacy would have a “polarizing” effect on the nation, and instead backed his ex-deputy Hamid Baghaie.

But the former president - whose tenure between 2005 and 2013 saw mass protests at home, plummeting relations with the West and a shattered economy - surprised everyone when he registered along with Baghaie yesterday. He told reporters at the interior ministry, where registrati­on was taking place, that he remained committed to his “moral promise” to Khamenei of not running for the May 19 election. But he said Khamenei’s “advice was not a ban”. “I repeat that I am committed to my moral promise and my presence and registrati­on is only to support Mr Baghaie,” he added without explanatio­n.

Only last week, flanked by his former deputy at his first press conference in four years, Ahmadineja­d said he had “no plans to present myself. I support Mr Baghaie as the best candidate”. The formal registrati­on period for presidenti­al hopefuls began on Tuesday and will continue until Saturday evening, after which candidates are vetted by the conservati­ve-dominated Guardian Council, with a final list to be announced on April 27. So far, 197 people have registered to run in the May 19 vote, eight of them women. No woman has ever been allowed to stand for the presidency in the Islamic republic.

Ahmadineja­d lost the support of many mainstream conservati­ves during his contentiou­s presidency, and some said yesterday that violating the supreme leader’s advice was a final straw. “With today’s move - registerin­g for the presidenti­al election, my belief in you was broken,” ex-lawmaker and Ahmadineja­d loyalist Mehdi Koochakzad­eh wrote on social media. “End of Ahmadineja­d,” tweeted Elyas Naderan, another conservati­ve former MP.

Analyst Farzan Sabet, a fellow at the Center for Internatio­nal Security and Cooperatio­n in Stanford University, said his registrati­on was indeed “shocking”. But his motivation “may be to send an implicit threat to the Guardian Council that if they disqualify Baghaei - like they did his former chief-of-staff Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei in the 2013 presidenti­al election - he will go back on his pledge and run for president,” said Sabet.

He added that the Guardian Council would find it hard to disqualify Ahmadineja­d, a two-time president who previously had the firm support of conservati­ves and the supreme leader. “Although it is quite possible that Ahmadineja­d will be disqualifi­ed by the Guardian Council, this could turn out to be politicall­y messy for them,” said Sabet. The conservati­ves have been struggling to unite around a single candidate to challenge President Hassan Rouhani, who is expected to register in the coming days.

They held a mass meeting last week at which they shortliste­d five candidates, who will be narrowed down to one before the vote, although some conservati­ves have already suggested they will run independen­tly. Ebrahim Raisi, a judge who currently heads the powerful Imam Reza charitable foundation in the Shiite holy city of Mashhad, topped the shortlist. Tehran mayor Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf was also on the list, but it remains unclear if he will make his third bid for the presidency.

Rouhani has stabilized the economy and ended some sanctions through a 2015 nuclear deal with world powers. But many Iranians are frustrated by the continued lack of investment in the economy and a jobless rate that remains at 12 percent. Rouhani’s administra­tion argues it inherited a devastated economic landscape - the result of Ahmadineja­d’s populist policies that included monthly cash handouts and ill-fated housing projects.

But these policies have also ensured Ahmadineja­d, 60, retains considerab­le popularity, particular­ly among the poor, potentiall­y underminin­g attempts by conservati­ves to unite their base around a mainstream candidate. If Ahmadineja­d is allowed to run, “he would likely draw more votes away from conservati­ve candidates than from Rouhani,” said Sabet. — AFP

 ?? — AP ?? TEHRAN: Former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d (right) and his close ally Hamid Baghaei flash the victory sign yesterday as they arrive at the Interior Ministry to register their candidacy for the upcoming presidenti­al elections.
— AP TEHRAN: Former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d (right) and his close ally Hamid Baghaei flash the victory sign yesterday as they arrive at the Interior Ministry to register their candidacy for the upcoming presidenti­al elections.

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