What's new

Hassan Rohani | The New Iranian President.

har dore migim khar nashim vali mesle inke in dore ham darim khar mishim berinbe ghalibaf ray bedim .

Please don't delete our posts dude .

mikhastam ray nadam vali in Rafsanjani ro asab maneh...
 
.
‘‘Hashemi knows he is unpopular, a loser, and is too old,’’ Mehdi Taeb, a hard-line cleric affiliated with the Revolutionary Guards, was quoted as saying of Rafsanjani, 80, by the semiofficial Fars news agency. He added that Mashaei ‘‘only registered because he wants to sabotage the vote, or make sure there is a low turnout and possibly cause riots on the streets.’’

mahdi-taeb-iranian-shiite-cleric-300x200.jpg

Mad grandpa cleric is accusing Akbar shah of being to old...

The state-run daily Kayhan, whose editor-in-chief is directly appointed by Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, accused Rafsanjani and Mashaei of secretly planning to start a smear campaign against the Guardian Council if they are not allowed to run.

‘‘Do they not see the council is there for the people?’’ the newspaper’s main editorial asked of the new candidates on Sunday. ‘‘They are locked in their cocoon of illusions and will receive a slap in the face.’’

Hints that guardian council will try to remove Mashaie and Akbar from candidates list?
Someone should abolish this stupid arrogant council.
 
. .
Are you expecting a new Iranian president who will stop using anti Israel rhetoric like all the previous Iranian president beside Ahmedinejad?


I don't think presidents can change the policy against Israel . I want a president that improves the economy , industry and ... and develop them .

foreign policy is important as well but I think new president shouldn't sacrifice everything to improve the relationship with the west .
 
.
How many politic parties from left, right, ethnic, liberal, religous, conservative, communist etc. circles will participate in Election of 2013. in Iran ? What sort of politic parties more favorable in iran right now?
 
.
Vice-President Mohammad-Reza Rahimi has withdrawn his candidacy from upcoming presidential elections, which means that Ahmadinejad is putting all his weight behind Mashaei. Its everything or nothing now.
 
. .
I think as always I will be a race between residents of Tehran who are tired of all the traffic , and the residents of Village , shahrestan , like myself , who don't care
 
. . . .
Iranian Officials Threaten Two Candidates for the Presidency
By THOMAS ERDBRINK

TEHRAN — Iranian officials on Monday issued blunt threats of violence against two last-minute registrants for the June 14 presidential election whose unwanted presence on the ballot has angered the country’s governing establishment.

An aide to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has shaken up the race in Iran.


The two latecomers, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a former president, and Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, an aide to the current president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, shook up the landscape of the elections on Saturday. Until they appeared, the registration process had been almost exclusively dominated by candidates representing the country’s establishment of conservative Shiite Muslim clerics and Revolutionary Guards commanders.

On Monday, Iran’s national deputy police commander, Esmael Ahmadi Moghaddam, was quoted by the newspaper Shargh as issuing a warning to President Ahmadinejad and Mr. Mashaei that the “shedding of blood is allowed” if they do not stop claiming to take their orders from the Shiite messiah.

The message, wrapped in ideological and religious wording, is the strongest indication yet that Mr. Ahmadinejad’s faction could be purged, after or even during the elections.

“This statement, by such a senior figure, equals a call to violence against Ahmadinejad, Mashaei and their group,” said one analyst who asked not to be named out of fear for his safety. “I don’t see how they can have any place in the system after the elections.”

Mr. Mashaei, 52, and Mr. Ahmadinejad have hinted in speeches at a personal relationship with the Shiite messiah, the 12th imam.

Those remarks run counter to the founding ideology of the Islamic republic, which is based upon the rule of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and the clergy. They are regarded as the messiah’s worldly caretakers in expectation of the return of the imam, who, according to tenets, went into occultation, a kind of suspended state, in the year 941. Every year dozens of people are arrested in Iran for claiming to be the messiah, who is a popular saint, or to have close relations with him.

Mr. Ahmadinejad and Mr. Mashaei have often stated that they are fully submissive to Ayatollah Khamenei, but the men have had public disagreements. In 2009, Ayatollah Khamenei prevented Mr. Mashaei from becoming vice president, and in 2011 Mr. Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Khamenei wrangled publicly over the intelligence minister, whom the president dismissed and the ayatollah reinstated.

Indirectly calling the president and his associate members of the “deviant current,” a label given to them by governing clerics and commanders, Mr. Ahmadi Moghaddam, the deputy police commander, said those adhering to Islam must seek allegiance with the country’s supreme leader. “Currently they are not fully following him,” he said. “Koran and the leader are inseparable institutions.”

Also on Monday, the top editor of the country’s influential state-run newspaper invoked the rallying cry of a notorious pressure group whose members shout “Hezbollah Mashallah,” or “Well done, Hezbollah,” as they use violence against political opponents.

“If they again have the idea of creating disturbances, they must know that the devotees, Hezbollah, will not allow them to do so even for a few hours,” he wrote in a column headlined “Hezbollah Mashallah,”
warning the two rogue candidates.

The editor, Hossein Shariatmadari, who is appointed by Ayatollah Khamenei, is the most important figure in the Iranian news media. In his editorials he often lays the foundations for state decisions.

Mr. Rafsanjani, he wrote, was a representative for the “American-Israeli sedition” of 2009, referring to the protests that erupted after the last presidential elections, which were considered fraudulent. Those in power widely accuse the former president of engineering the demonstrations and say he is therefore unfit to lead the country.

Mr. Ahmadinejad is “suicidal,” Mr. Shariatmadari wrote, for openly aligning himself with Mr. Mashaei, as when he said recently that he and his aide were one and the same. The editor predicted that the president is preparing to create unrest, in case Mr. Mashaei is not allowed to participate. He also said that Mr. Ahmadinejad, Mr. Mashaei and Mr. Rafsanjani had made a pact in an effort to stay in power.

“Secret messages between both groups are being exchanged,” he wrote, adding that any coordination between both candidates would be useless. “The life of the Ahmadinejad government is over,” he said. “And Mr. Rafsanjani will undoubtedly face defeat.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/15/world/middleeast/presidential-candidates-in-iran-are-threatened.html?_r=0
 
.
friends. tell me ..

1. including whether pan-Iranists?
I heard the party pan-Iranian scholars reject the election is that true? what their supporters? a lot?

2. are there - look right powers?
 
.
friends. tell me ..

1. including whether pan-Iranists?
I heard the party pan-Iranian scholars reject the election is that true? what their supporters? a lot?

2. are there - look right powers?

No , pan iranists are marginal ;) ;)
 
. .

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom