Gulf News

Ahmadineja­d told not to run for president

Iran supreme leader’s instructio­n eliminates major challenger

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Iran’s supreme leader has told former hardline president Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d not to stand again in next year’s elections, state media reported yesterday, effectivel­y eliminatin­g a major challenger to pragmatist incumbent Hassan Rouhani.

Ahmadineja­d had not announced any plans to run in the vote scheduled for May, but has made several speeches in recent months, prompting speculatio­n of a political comeback.

Commentato­rs had suggested the firebrand populist, who frequently enraged the West with his rhetoric during his eight years in office, would have given Iran’s conservati­ves their best chance of regaining power.

But the instructio­n by supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, reported by state news agency IRNA, effectivel­y destroys his chances of getting the wider backing he would need to run a successful campaign.

“He [Ahmadineja­d] came to me and I told him not to stand as I think it is not in his interest and that of the country,” Khamenei was quoted as saying.

‘Bipolar divisions’

“It will create bipolar opposites and divisions in the country which I believe is harmful,” Khamenei added.

Rouhani’s popularity surged after last year’s deal with world powers that lifted most sanctions on Iran in exchange for curbs on its nuclear programme.

Another potential rival — Revolution­ary Guard Commander Qassem Sulaimani, the most high-profile face in the fight against Daesh in Iraq and Syria — said this month he would not stand in the vote.

Ahmadineja­d was first elected president in 2005. His disputed win in the 2009 election prompted the Islamic Republic’s biggest protests and a security crackdown in which several people were killed and hundreds were arrested.

Iranian law bars a president from seeking a third consecutiv­e term. But Ahmadineja­d would have been able to run again after the gap caused by Rouhani’s term.

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