Khaleej Times

Hardliners claim victory in Iran polls after record low turnout

- LOWEST TURNOUT SINCE 1979

tehran — Iran’s conservati­ves claimed victory on Sunday in a general election marked by the lowest turnout since the 1979 Islamic Revolution amid public anger against the government, an economic downturn and the disqualifi­cation of half the candidates.

A conservati­ve resurgence would heap pressure on beleaguere­d President Hassan Rouhani and signal a shift from four years ago when reformists and moderates won a slender majority in parliament.

The interior ministry announced results of 95 per cent of the 208 constituen­cies in Friday’s election, declaring the names of the winning candidates but without specifying their political affiliatio­n.

“Victory for the anti-American candidates, a new slap for Trump,” crowed the Kayhan newspaper.

“The people have disqualifi­ed the reformists,” it added, alluding to Rouhani’s backers, who have been weakened by President Donald Trump pulling the US out of a nuclear deal and by a slew of economic and political crises.

Seventeen women were elected, the website of the government newspaper Iran said — the same number as in the outgoing 290seat parliament.

Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli announced the participat­ion

rate was 42.6 percent — the lowest in four decades.

The election came two days after Iran announced its first cases of the deadly new coronaviru­s that emerged in China.

“We held these elections when there were various incidents in the country: we had bad weather, there was this coronaviru­s disease, there was the plane crash,” Rahmani Fazli said, referring to the January 3 downing of a Ukrainian airliner which killed 176 people.

He said that in such a scenario

“the turnout rate seems perfectly acceptable for us.”

A low participat­ion had been widely forecast, as a conservati­vedominate­d electoral watchdog disqualifi­ed about half of the 16,000-odd candidates, mostly moderates and reformists.

The Fars news agency said a second round would be held in at least 11 constituen­cies. One woman candidate has qualified for the second round, Iran newspaper added.

Voter apathy marked the polls, but Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei lauded the people’s “huge participat­ion” despite what he termed “negative propaganda” by foreign media.

It “began a few months ago and grew larger approachin­g the election and in the past two days, under the pretext of this illness,” he said.

“Their media did not miss the slightest opportunit­y to discourage people from voting. (Our enemies) are even opposed to any election by the Iranian people,” the leader added.

Iran on Sunday reported three new coronaviru­s deaths, taking its toll to eight — the highest in any country outside China. It said there were 43 COVID-19 virus infections nationwide. —

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