Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Election pushes Iran boundaries

- By Jon Gambrell

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — From a former president disobeying the supreme leader to open discussion of a 1980s mass execution, Iran’s presidenti­al election is pushing the boundaries of what can be discussed in public and done online, a small but noticeable shift in the country’s clerically overseen polls.

The push doesn’t portend a dramatic change to the structure of the Islamic Republic, under which Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has the final say over all state matters and clerics determine who can run for office and what bills become law.

It does, however, show that the government’s ability to clamp down on criticism is waning as Iranians turn to encrypted messaging apps like Telegram and internet chats ahead of the May 19 election.

“There’s no doubt about the fact that the state has less control of the discursive realm. It’s much easier for people to get informatio­n out,” said Adnan Tabatabai, an Iran analyst based in Germany who is the CEO of the Center for Applied Research in Partnershi­p with the Orient.

“The social media realm is no longer just the space for, let’s say, young, reformmind­ed moderate figures and people. The conservati­ve and hard-line elements have (done) their homework in that regard so they can use these channels as well.”

The election appeared at first to be a walk for incumbent President Hassan Rouhani, whose moderate administra­tion negotiated the 2015 deal with world powers to curb its nuclear activities. But while Iran has signed multibilli­on-dollar deals with airplane manufactur­ers, the benefits of the lifting of sanctions have yet to reach most Iranians, fueling discontent.

Then came the surprise entry into the race of former President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d, who had questioned the Holocaust, predicted Israel’s demise and ramped up the nuclear program during his eight years in office.

Authoritie­s ultimately quashed his bid through the clerical screening that controls who can run. However, his campaign, in defiance of Khamenei’s advice that he not run, challenged the supreme leader’s authority.

As the candidate field firmed up, Iranians of all political stripes shared messages, photos and video across the mobile messaging applicatio­n Telegram. The app’s designers say some 40 million of its active users are in Iran, a nation of 80 million people. This year’s vote marks the first presidenti­al election held since the app swept across Iran.

Supporters of hard-line candidate Ebrahim Raisi circulated a video supposedly shot with passers-by on the streets of Tehran looking at a photo of a car bombing. All suggest the attack happened somewhere else until they turn over the picture to see it happened in Iran, allegedly at the hands of the exiled Mujahedeen-e-Khalq group.

The video seeks to defend Raisi, a favorite of Khamenei, and justify his alleged involvemen­t in the 1988 mass execution of thousands of prisoners, many of them MEK members. It also represents a hard-line justificat­ion for the executions, one of the darkest moments of Iran’s post-revolution history still not recognized by its government.

Rouhani supporters also have effectivel­y used Telegram. After state television censored part of a Rouhani advertisem­ent that included shouts supporting reformists detained after Iran’s disputed 2009 presidenti­al election, the unedited video quickly spread through the app.

In another break from precedent, Rouhani has increasing­ly criticized Iran’s powerful Revolution­ary Guard, a hard-line paramilita­ry force answering only to Khamenei.

During a televised presidenti­al debate, Rouhani pointed to the March 2016 launch of a ballistic missile bearing the words “Israel must be wiped out” in Hebrew, accusing the Guard of trying to sabotage the nuclear deal.

Rouhani kept up that criticism during a recent campaign stop in Iran’s western city of Hamedan. “Tell the extremists and those who use violence that your era is over,” he said.

Rouhani himself hasn’t escaped criticism.

During his visit this month to the site of a mining disaster that killed at least 42 people, angry miners beat on his armored SUV and shouted at him.

Videos by the semi-official Fars and Tasnim news agencies, both believed to have ties to the Guard, broke news of the incident via their Telegram channels.

“In tragedy, when clerics are supposed to sympathize with ordinary people, they don’t,” said Mehdi Khalaji, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near-East Policy. “This has widened the gap between people and the clerics.”

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