Arab Times

Ex-VP’s jail casts shadow on Iran’s Ahmadineja­d

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BEIRUT, May 3, (RTRS): In late January, a former deputy of conservati­ve ex-president Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d who has been jailed for embezzleme­nt raised explosive allegation­s which have now spurred speculatio­n Ahmadineja­d himself could face charges.

They were made in a private letter that was published by the Iranian Labour News Agency, giving a rare insight into splits at the top at a time when the former president, a fierce critic of the West, was showing signs of preparing a political comeback.

Ahmadineja­d has denied the allegation­s, which linked him to the case, and his supporters say they are politicall­y motivated.

Concern

Senior officials have since expressed concern public splits within Iran’s factionali­sed elite might undermine negotiatio­ns with major world powers on its disputed nuclear programme.

In a speech in late March for example, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei urged any critics of the government leading the negotiatio­ns, led by Ahmadineja­d’s successor, centrist Hassan Rouhani, not to use insults.

Against this background, pursuing the allegation­s against Ahmadineja­d would be sensitive; some analysts say too sensitive. Others say statements by some MPs, officials and media close to the authoritie­s suggest the judiciary is inching towards a case.

Ahmadineja­d’s former vice president Mohammed Reza Rahimi became the most senior official to be convicted of graft since the 1979 Islamic Revolution when he was sentenced to five years in jail and fined 38.5 billion rials (about $1.3 million).

State media said he had taken bribes in connection with corruption at the state Iran Insurance Company.

Rahimi wrote to Ahmadineja­d complainin­g he should have supported him over the case and alleging that he, Rahimi, had helped the government pay 12 billion rials ($400,000) in bribes to about 170 conservati­ve parliament­ary candidates in 2008.

“Were you not informed that this is what the whole story was about?” Rahimi wrote.

He did not spell out what the candidates were supposed to have done for the alleged payments, but implied the MPs would be expected to cooperate with Ahmadineja­d’s government. Rahimi became vice president from 20091013.

Before the letter was published, Ahmadineja­d had denied in a statement that the corruption charges against Rahimi were linked to his government, noting they related to a time before Rahimi became his deputy.

Days afterwards, he launched a new website in a hint that he could mount a comeback in parliament­ary elections next year.

Last year, a billionair­e tycoon with alleged links to aides to Ahmadineja­d was hanged for involvemen­t in a $2.7 billion fraud and moneylaund­ering affair involving 14 state-owned and private banks. All four defendants denied wrongdoing.

It came to light as Iranians were being hard hit by the sanctions and severely damaged the reputation of Ahmadineja­d and his entourage at the end of his second term.

Ahmadineja­d’s supporters accused his political enemies of using that case to ensure the outgoing president’s allies had no chance in the 2013 presidenti­al election.

That vote was won by Rouhani by a landslide on pledges to relieve the internatio­nal isolation and repair economic damage from sanctions over the disputed nuclear programme as well as what Rouhani said was financial mismanagem­ent under Ahmadineja­d.

Rahimi’s letter prompted a group of MPs to write to the heads of the judiciary and parliament urging them to reveal which candidates were alleged to have received bribes.

“This was not clean money. We have to get this money back by any means possible and put it at the disposal of the people,” Kamaluddin Pirmoazen, one of the letter’s authors, told Reuters.

Afiery orator who denied the Holocaust and often condemned the West, Ahmadineja­d also clashed with parliament, where he was accused of mismanagin­g the economy and snubbing Khamenei.

Ahmad Tavakoli, a conservati­ve MP long critical of Ahmadineja­d, said charges should be brought against him.

“Any person who breaks the law must be tried. And in my view Ahmadineja­d has been a law-breaker,” Tavakoli said in early February, according to the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA).

A Facebook and Instagram campaign were started shortly after the letter was published called “Demand for Trial of Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d”. The creators of the Facebook page declined an interview request.

A spokesman for Iran’s Guardian Council, a powerful body which can vet parliament­ary candidates and has legislativ­e and judicial authority, said it could step in to investigat­e the allegation­s in Rahimi’s letter if the parliament began investigat­ing the matter or if the judiciary opened a new file.

Asked about the wider implicatio­ns of Rahimi’s sentencing, judiciary spokesman Gholamhoss­ein Mohseni-Ejei told a news conference: “The judiciary has had and continues to have the serious intent to confront all people who are economical­ly corrupt at whatever level or whatever position they are in.”

Attempts

Attempts to reach former senior Ahmadineja­d advisers by phone for further comment were unsuccessf­ul.

Ahmadineja­d already faces a handful of charges from his time in office which, according to local media, are mostly linked to government procedures that were not followed properly. He was summoned to court in late 2013 but did not show up.

Asked about Ahmadineja­d’s legal file, judiciary spokesman Mohseni-Ejei said this month: “At the moment this matter is being followed up and the duration will depend on the prosecutor.”

Some doubt Ahmadineja­d will be prosecuted regardless of the validity of the charges as this could tarnish Khamenei, whose support was key to Ahmadineja­d’s grip on power, especially after his 2009 re-election when popular unrest over alleged vote fraud were crushed by security forces.

“If they act against Ahmadineja­d not only are there more documents he might reveal, as he’s often threatened to do, but eventually people will start to ask, ‘Who was behind him?’” said Abbas Milani, director of the Iranian Studies program at Stanford University.

“And we all know the answer to that question — it’s Ayatollah Khamenei and the IRGC’s top command,” he said, referring to Iran’s most powerful military force, the Revolution­ary Guards. “I think it (prosecutio­n of Ahmadineja­d) is a political liability they just can’t afford at this time.”

Ahmadineja­d was asked by local media in February about the corruption allegation­s. The Iranian Students’ News Agency quoted him as saying: “There are answers but now is not the time.”

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