Kuwait Times

Iran’s Larijani rebuffed over election bar

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Iran’s ex-parliament speaker Ali Larijani yesterday demanded an explanatio­n of why he was barred from running in next week’s presidenti­al poll but was promptly rebuffed by the election watchdog.

The moderate conservati­ve was disqualifi­ed by the powerful Guardian Council in a surprise move that leaves judiciary chief Ebrahim Raisi, an ultraconse­rvative, the clear favorite in the June 18 election. Larijani called on Twitter on the Guardian Council to “officially and publicly disclose all the reasons” for his disqualifi­cation as reports on him and his family had been “proven to be false”.

The council’s spokesman in response said the law does not mandate the body to explain its reasoning in public. The vetting process is carried out using “adequate and trustable documents”, Abbas Ali Kadkhodaee said in a tweet reported by local agencies.

“The presidenti­al election law has not specified anything regarding protesting disqualifi­cations and public disclosure of their reasons,” he said. The conservati­ve-dominated, unelected council has approved seven candidates, five of them ultraconse­rvatives, to run in the election from a field of about 600 hopefuls. In addition to Larijani, who serves as advisor to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, it also barred first vice-president Eshaq Jahangiri and firebrand former president Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d.

The disqualifi­cations have unleashed a flood of criticism, including from a member of the 12man council. Ayatollah Sadegh Amoli Larijani, a former judiciary chief and brother to the exspeaker, said “security bodies” were influencin­g the council’s decisions through “false reports”. President Hassan Rouhani, who is constituti­onally barred from running for a third consecutiv­e term, said last month he had sent a letter to Khamenei asking him to intervene and ensure greater “competitio­n” in the election. —

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