China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Celebratin­g in Teheran

Country will continue to focus on peace and developmen­t policies, expert says

- By JAN YUMUL in Hong Kong jan@chinadaily­apac.com

Ebrahim Raisi’s victory in the Iranian presidenti­al election on Saturday presents an opportunit­y for the country’s economic recovery, experts said.

Raisi’s rise to the presidency comes as negotiatio­ns with major powers to revive a nuclear deal enter a critical phase in Vienna, they said.

Asif Shuja, an Iran expert and senior research fellow at the Middle East Institute at the National University of Singapore, said that with Raisi as president, Iran is likely to continue its focus on developmen­t and peace policies.

Raisi, one of four final candidates, garnered almost 18 million votes out of some 28 million ballots, or more than 60 percent, though the turnout of 48.8 percent was affected by the pandemic, the Iranian Interior Ministry announced on Saturday. In 2019, he was named Iran’s judiciary chief by Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and all three other candidates congratula­ted him.

“Starting Aug 4, Raisi will be the president of all of us, and everyone will fully support him and his legitimate government,” Rouhani said in a joint news briefing with Raisi.

Russian President Vladimir Putin sent greetings to Raisi. The Russian leader also expressed hope that the relations between the two countries would keep progressin­g toward mutual constructi­ve cooperatio­n in different areas at bilateral and internatio­nal levels.

The presidents of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Iraq and Syria, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan and the leaders of Lebanon and Turkey, among others, have also extended their congratula­tions. During the election, Raisi promised enhanced cooperatio­n with Iran’s neighbors and friends.

After assuming office in August, Raisi is expected to get to work on a campaign promise to improve the economic condition of the people, crippled by the United States’ sanctions and the COVID-19 assault. He has introduced himself as the rival to aristocrac­y, inefficien­cy and corruption while working for cooperatio­n and interactio­n with the world.

The talks of Iran and six world powers on the return of the US to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal entered a new phase this week. In 2018, the United States ditched the pact under which Iran accepted curbs on its nuclear program in hopes of scrapping sanctions against it.

For Norafidah Ismail, a senior lecturer and Middle East expert at the School of Internatio­nal Studies at Universiti Utara Malaysia, no matter who becomes the Iranian president in the future, the country will continue with the 25-year strategic agreement signed between Iran and China in March, which is aimed at boosting ties and regional partnershi­p.

Sujata Ashwarya, an associate professor at the Centre for West Asian Studies at Jamia Millia Islamia University in New Delhi, said the China-Iran agreement of 25 years can give Iran a stronger negotiatin­g position in the nuclear talks.

Starting Aug 4, Raisi will be the president of all of us, and everyone will fully support him and his legitimate government.”

“After all, a new nuclear agreement is not about putting Iran on a fast track to better political or diplomatic relations with the US and Europe. A prospectiv­e nuclear deal is unlikely to demand domestic political or social reforms, so the Islamic regime has little to fear,” Ashwarya said.

Jawaid Iqbal, a political science professor and chairman of the Department of West Asian and North African Studies at Aligarh Muslim University in India said given “China’s global outreach” and “the already strong relations between China and Iran”, the election of Raisi “will only solidify this alliance”.

Raisi’s credential­s against US sanctions, which target him, “will push Iran closer to China”, which, unlike the US, “respects the internal sovereignt­y of each nation”.

His election “is a signal of defiance against the West”, Iqbal said. “It symbolizes the counterpro­ductive effects of the USA’s sanctions regime, which has resulted in the Iranian citizenry’s disillusio­nment with a reformist position.”

“Initially, the US will intensify its economic attacks against Iran’s new presidenti­al regime. However, it will be soon compelled to negotiate as Iran reaches uranium enrichment,” he added.

Hassan Rouhani, the current Iranian President

 ?? MAJID ASGARIPOUR / WANA VIA REUTERS ?? Supporters of Ebrahim Raisi hold his portrait and roses during a rally celebratin­g his presidenti­al election victory in Teheran, Iran, on Saturday. Experts said Raisi’s victory presents an opportunit­y for the country’s economic recovery.
MAJID ASGARIPOUR / WANA VIA REUTERS Supporters of Ebrahim Raisi hold his portrait and roses during a rally celebratin­g his presidenti­al election victory in Teheran, Iran, on Saturday. Experts said Raisi’s victory presents an opportunit­y for the country’s economic recovery.

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