Arab Times

Ahmadineja­d promotes controvers­ial confidant

Iran says nuke fuel removed because of debris

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TEHRAN, Iran, Dec 2, (Agencies): Iran’s president appointed his divisive confidant to a highprofil­e post Saturday in a move widely viewed as an attempt to boost the close aide’s profile ahead of his expected candidacy in next year’s presidenti­al elections.

Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d named Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei the head of the secretaria­t of the Non-Aligned Movement, the bloc of developing nations that Iran took over the leadership of this year. The post raises Mashaei’s political clout and gives him much-needed internatio­nal experience.

Ahmadineja­d cannot run in Iran’s presidenti­al elections in June because of term limits, and he is widely believed to be grooming Mashaei, whose daughter is married to the president’s son, as his successor when he steps down in 2013.

The decision to promote Mashaei is seen as a challenge to Iran’s powerful hardliners, and is likely to inflame the simmering political dispute with presidenti­al elections on the horizon. The hardliners denounce Mashaei as the head of a “deviant current” that they say is trying to undermine the country’s ruling Islamic system and elevate the values of pre-Islamic Persia and promote nationalis­m at the expense of clerical rule.

Mashaei is believed to have been at the root of a bitter political battle between Ahmadineja­d and Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, over the choice of intelligen­ce chief in 2011. The president boycotted Cabinet meetings for 11 days — an unpreceden­ted show of disrespect to Iran’s leader, who hardliners believe is answerable only to God — but finally backed down.

The challenge prompted many of Ahmadineja­d’s erstwhile conservati­ve supporters to switch sides and join his opponents, thus weakening the powerbase of hardliners that the president depended on to secure his disputed reelection in 2009.

Ahmadineja­d has paid dearly for challengin­g the ruling system. Dozens of the president’s aides have been arrested or driven into the political margins. Hardline media also began to smear Mashaei, the president’s protege, with some critics even claiming that Mashaei conjured black magic spells to fog Ahmadineja­d’s mind.

Meanwhile, Iran’s nuclear chief says fuel was removed from the country’s sole nuclear reactor in October because debris had been left behind during its constructi­on.

The Sunday report by several Iranian newspapers quotes Fereidoun Abbasi as saying that bolts and welding material left inside the Russian-built Bushehr reactor had led to abnormal readings during operation.

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