Khaleej Times

Khamenei prays for huge turnout

- AFP

tehran — Iran’s top two presidenti­al candidates launched a final day of election campaignin­g on Wednesday as the supreme leader called for a massive turnout to bolster the regime against its ‘enemies’.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei suggested Iran’s foes would be deterred from pursuing regime change if they saw voters flock to the ballot boxes in Friday’s poll.

“American, European officials and those of the Zionist regime are watching our elections to see the level of participat­ion,” he said in quotes carried on his Telegram messenger account.

“The Iranian nation has enemies. Faced with the enemy, the people should show its determinat­ion and calm,” he said.

Turnout is all-important to the Iranian regime, which uses regular elections to demonstrat­e the legitimacy of its Islamic system.

But on the campaign trail, two starkly different visions of how that system will evolve have been on display.

President Hasan Rohani, a 68-year-old moderate cleric, defended his internatio­nal outreach, which included a nuclear deal with world powers that ended many sanctions in exchange for curbs to Iran’s atomic programme.

Rohani told his hardline opponents they were not equipped to continue his diplomatic efforts.

“You say you want to negotiate with the world, but you don’t know how to speak the global language. You don’t even know how to speak the language of your own people,” he said at a rally in the northern town of Ardebil. His hardline op- ponent, 56-year-old cleric Ebrahim Raisi, has vowed to stick by the nuclear deal, but said the government had made too many concession­s to the West and failed to “cash the cheque” offered by the accord.

“A diplomacy of supplicati­on will not solve our problems. We need a diplomacy of strength,” he told supporters in Tehran, according to Isna news agency.

Raisi said Iran’s continued exclusion from internatio­nal banking, despite the nuclear deal, was proof that Rohani’s diplomacy had failed.

“Some people say that if we’re elected, the sanctions will return,” said Raisi.

“But in what measure have the sanctions been lifted? The banking sanctions that were the most important are still in place.”

Campaignin­g will draw to a close on Thursday morning, 24 hours before polls open.

Rohani is still seen as the frontrunne­r, though polling is unreliable in Iran. Early election results are expected on Saturday.

The conservati­ve-dominated Guardian Council selected six candidates to stand in the election but two have dropped out, effectivel­y creating a two-horse race between Raisi and Rohani.

Conservati­ve Mostafa Mirsalim and reformist Mostafa Hashemitab­a are still in the race, though they are not expected to win more than a few per cent of the vote. —

 ?? AFP ?? Supporters of Iranian president and candidate in the upcoming presidenti­al elections, Hasan Rohani, attend a campaign rally in the northweste­rn city of Ardabil on Wednesday. —
AFP Supporters of Iranian president and candidate in the upcoming presidenti­al elections, Hasan Rohani, attend a campaign rally in the northweste­rn city of Ardabil on Wednesday. —

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