Hardline prosecutor mounts strong
challenge to Iran's Rouhani
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[May 18, 2017]
By Bozorgmehr Sharafedin
LONDON (Reuters) - Hardline cleric Ebrahim
Raisi, a harsh critic of the West and the standard bearer of Iran's
security hawks, has drawn on economic discontent to mount an
unexpectedly strong challenge to pragmatist Hassan Rouhani in Friday's
presidential elections.
A protege of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Raisi has focused
his campaign on the economy, visiting rural areas and small villages,
promising the poor housing, jobs and more welfare benefits.
"I represent laborers, women without guardians, those who have a lot to
say but have no microphone," the 56-year-old cleric said in a televised
presidential debate.
Iranian media have speculated that he could go even further than the
presidency as a possible successor to his patron Khamenei, the
77-year-old who has been in power since 1989 and whose authority exceeds
that of the elected president.
Raisi has promised to create six million jobs in his first term if
elected, and to triple monthly cash handouts to the lower class.
Rouhani's allies call such promises "populist" and say Raisi has not
explained how he will pay for them.
Reformists and rights activists also say they are alarmed by Raisi's
background as a hardline judge, especially during the 1980s when he was
one of four judges that imposed death penalties on thousands of
political prisoners.
In the tense final televised debate, Rouhani stretched the boundaries of
permissible rhetoric in Iran to paint Raisi as a power-hungry pawn of
the security services.
"Mr. Raisi, you can slander me as much you wish. As a judge of the
clerical court, you can even issue an arrest order. But please don't
abuse religion for power," Rouhani said at one point. He said "security
and revolutionary groups" were busing people to Raisi's rallies, and
asked who financed them.
But Raisi's economic message could win traction with voters who have
seen few benefits so far from Rouhani's signature achievement, a deal
with world powers to curb Iran's nuclear program in return for lifting
financial sanctions.
Raisi says the president sold out Iran's interests too cheaply to the
West, betting too strongly on rapprochement with enemies while doing too
little at home to boost production.
"Our problems cannot be resolved by Americans and Westerners," Raisi
said in September before announcing his candidacy. "They have not
resolved a single problem of any country. They have brought nothing but
misery to other nations."
However, Raisi has said he will abide by the nuclear deal and will guard
it "regardless of its many faults".
"The nuclear deal is like a check that Rouhani's government was not able
to cash," he said in a television interview.
RELIGIOUS BACKING
Raisi is a mid-ranking figure in the hierarchy of Iran's Shi'ite Muslim
clergy but has been a senior official for decades in the judiciary which
enforces clerical control of the country.
Last year Khamenei named him custodian of Astan Qods Razavi, an
organization in charge of a multi-billion-dollar religious foundation
that manages donations to the country's holiest shrine in the northern
city of Mashhad.
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A supporter of Iranian Presidential candidate Ebrahim Raisi holds
his poster during a campaign rally in Tehran, Iran, May 17, 2017.
Picture taken May 17, 2017. TIMA via Reuters
The religious conglomerate, whose economic arm lists 36 subsidiary
companies and institutes on its website, owns mines, textile
factories, a pharmaceutical plant and even a major oil and gas firm.
Even before the revolution, "those who led this endowment were very
close to the head of state, to the supreme power of the country," a
former senior Iranian diplomat told Reuters on condition of
anonymity. "Raisi has lots of power."
Raisi studied Islamic law under Khamenei and is widely seen as a
protege of the supreme leader, who is nominally expected to remain
neutral in electoral politics.
"Raisi is in Khamenei's circle of trust. He has been one of
Khamenei's students and his thoughts are very close to the Supreme
Leader's," reformist former lawmaker Jamileh Kadivar told Reuters.
Raisi's representatives have denied that Khamenei told him to run.
However, rival conservatives who might have split the anti-Rouhani
vote have stepped aside to give Raisi a clear shot under pressure
from allies of the supreme leader.
The most recent candidate to back Raisi was the popular mayor of
Tehran, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, who dropped out of the race on
Monday. Now, campaign posters show the black-turbaned Raisi
alongside Qalibaf in a yellow safety helmet, trying to appeal both
to religious groups and pragmatists.
Although he had little public profile before this election cycle,
Raisi is a veteran of the upper reaches of the Iranian power
structures. He served as deputy head of the judiciary for ten years,
before being appointed prosecutor-general in 2014.
"Raisi knows his way in the dark corridors of Iranian politics very
well. But he is more used to grilling politicians in the comfortable
shade of the judiciary than standing in the blazing sun of public
eye," said Hossein Rassam, a former Iran adviser to Britain's
Foreign Office.
(Reporting by Bozorgmehr Sharafedin, additional reporting by Parisa
Hafezi in Ankara, Tom Finn in Doha, Yeganeh Torbati in Washnigton
DC; editing by Peter Graff)
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