The Asian Age

Conservati­ve Ghalibaf quits race

- ERIC RANDOLPH

Tehran mayor Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf withdrew from Iran’s presidenti­al race Monday, paving the way for a head-to-head battle between President Hassan Rouhani and his leading hardline challenger in this week’s election.

Ghalibaf called on his supporters to back conservati­ve cleric and jurist Ebrahim Raisi in Friday’s vote, saying it was vital for the “preservati­on of the interests of the people, the revolution and the country”.

Unofficial polls still show Rouhani, a moderate cleric who has sought to improve civil liberties and rebuild ties with the West, as the front-runner.

But he has faced a harder-than-expected challenge from the conservati­ves due to the continued stagnation of the economy.

Raisi, a former prosecutor-general and close ally of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has called for a more assertive approach to the West and a focus on building a self-sufficient “resistance economy”.

This had been Ghalibaf’s third bid for the presidency, having been runner-up to Rouhani in 2013.

A former police chief and member of the Revolution­ary Guards, he has played on his toughguy image in the past, but this year targeted his campaign against the wealthy elite, whom he dubbed the “four-percenters”.

“A fundamenta­l and crucial decision must be taken

IRAN’S PRESIDENTI­AL ELECTION

for the unity of the revolution­ary front,” Ghalibaf wrote in a statement announcing his withdrawal.

“To protect this great ideal, I ask all of my supporters across the country to offer all of their support to the success of our dear brother Ebrahim Raisi.”

He launched brutal tirades against Rouhani and his reformist allies in the televised debates, accusing them of corruption and failing to support the poor.

“The expectatio­n of us and the people is that this decision sets the stage for a new era of economic transforma­tion that, by cutting off the four-percenters from the economy, will lead to youth employment and support for the underprivi­leged and poor in Iran.

“The fight has just begun,” he said. — AFP

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