Khaleej Times

A vote between diplomacy and resistance

- AFP

tehran — Iranian voters will decide the fate of moderate President Hasan Rohani and his policy of engagement with the West on Friday as he goes headto-head with hardline cleric Ebrahim Raisi.

Rohani has spent four years trying to pull Iran out of its global isolation, reaching a 2015 deal with world powers that ended some sanctions in exchange for curbs to its nuclear programme.

But with US President Donald Trump threatenin­g to scrap the deal, and visiting Saudi Arabia this weekend, that policy of detente looks increasing­ly in jeopardy.

Raisi has agreed to stick by the nuclear accord but says Rohani put too much trust in the West.

“We should not show any weakness in the face of the enemy,” said the 56-year-old Raisi during a televised debate.

The election has essentiall­y become a two-horse race after the other leading conservati­ve, Tehran mayor Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, dropped out on Monday and threw his support behind Raisi.

The field narrowed further on Tuesday when reformist first vicepresid­ent Eshaq Jahangiri pulled out and endorsed the incumbent.

Rohani, a 68-year-old cleric, has tried to frame the election as a choice between greater civil liberties and “extremism”, and unofficial polls still put him ahead.

But he has faced a much tougher campaign than anyone expected just a couple of months ago, as hardliners have savaged his economic record, saying his diplomatic efforts have done little to tackle poverty and unemployme­nt.

Raisi was a relative unknown when he joined the race earlier this year, having mostly worked behind-the-scenes as a top prosecutor and recently as head of the powerful Imam Reza charitable foundation.

A close ally and former pupil of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, he is seen as the preferred choice of the powerful security establishm­ent, advocating a more self-sufficient “resistance economy” rather than a reliance on foreigners.

Meanwhile, Rohani says he needs more time to rebuild the economy, which was shattered by years of sanctions and mismanagem­ent when he took over in 2013. “At the halfway point, we don’t turn back,” he tells voters.

He has vowed to work towards removing the remaining, non-nuclear sanctions imposed by the US, which have strangled Iran’s efforts to sign trade deals with European and Asian countries. That would be a tall order, given that Trump has launched a 90-day review to see whether he will stick by the nuclear deal at all, let alone remove any other sanctions.

While Iranians largely welcomed the reduced tensions with the West, the ongoing economic slump has taken a toll on morale. “My cheques keep bouncing,” said Babak, a 35-year-old clothing supplier in south Tehran. “I may vote, but I know it doesn’t change anything.”

Unemployme­nt is officially stuck at 12.5 per cent — close to 30 per cent for the young — and many more are under-employed or struggling to get by.

Rohani says he inherited a financial mess from his predecesso­r Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d, who was dramatical­ly barred from standing this year by the Guardian Council after falling foul of the conservati­ve establishm­ent. That has left a vacuum for many working-class voters who fondly recall the constructi­on boom, cash hand-outs and earthy rhetoric of Ahmadineja­d’s rule.

Voter apathy is a threat to the Islamic regime, which stakes its legitimacy on a high turnout every four years. “The regime needs participat­ion. What matters most is the turnout, not the result,” said Clement Therme, of the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies. —

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