Judge under U.S. sanctions set to win presidency for Iran's hardliners
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[June 18, 2021]
By Parisa Hafezi
DUBAI (Reuters) - Iranians voted on Friday
in an election expected to hand the presidency to a hardline judge
subject to U.S. sanctions, though many are likely to ignore the ballot
amid economic hardship and calls for a boycott by critics at home and
abroad.
With uncertainty surrounding Iran's efforts to revive its 2015 nuclear
deal, the turnout is being viewed by analysts as a referendum on the
leadership's handling of an array of crises.
After voting in the capital Tehran, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei urged Iranians to cast ballots, saying "each vote counts ...
come and vote and choose your president".
Hardliner Ebrahim Raisi, 60, is the favourite to succeed Hassan Rouhani,
a pragmatist prevented under the constitution from serving a third
four-year term in the post, which runs the government day-to-day and
reports to the supreme leader.
A close Khamenei ally and like him a harsh critic of the West, Raisi is
under U.S. sanctions for alleged involvement in executions of political
prisoners decades ago.
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"If elected, Raisi will be the first Iranian president in recent memory
to have not only been sanctioned before he has taken office, but
potentially sanctioned while being in office," said analyst Jason
Brodsky.
While hundreds of Iranians, including relatives of dissidents killed
since Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution and political prisoners, have
called for an election boycott, the establishment’s religiously devout
core supporters are expected to vote for Raisi.
"I will vote (out of respect) for martyrs," a young man told state TV,
referring to Iranians killed by the country's enemies.
State television showed long queues outside polling stations in several
cities. More than 59 million Iranians are eligible to vote. Polls will
close at 1930 GMT but can be extended for two hours. The results are
expected around midday on Saturday.
"My vote is a big NO to the Islamic Republic," said Farzaneh, 58, from
the central city of Yazd. She said contrary to what state TV reported,
"the polling stations are almost empty here".
DEMISE OF THE PRAGMATISTS
A win for Raisi would confirm the political demise of pragmatist
politicians like Rouhani, weakened by the U.S. decision to quit the
nuclear deal and reimpose sanctions in a move that stifled rapprochement
with the West.
The reimposed curbs slashed oil exports from 2.8 million barrels per day
in 2018 to as low as an estimated 200,000 bpd in some months of 2020,
although volumes have crept up since then. The rial currency has tumbled
70% in value since 2018.
Under pressure over rising inflation and joblessness, at about 39% and
11% respectively, the clerical leadership needs a high vote count to
boost its legitimacy, damaged after a series of protests against poverty
and political curbs since 2017.
"I wish we didn’t have any of those problems since the registration
day," said Rouhani after casting his vote, a clear reference to a
hardline election body's rejection from the race of several prominent
moderate and conservative candidates.
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Presidential candidate Ebrahim Raisi looks on at a polling station
during presidential elections in Tehran, Iran June 18, 2021. Majid
Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS
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Official opinion polls suggest turnout could be as
low as 44%, significantly lower than the 73.3% seen in 2017. Since
1980, the highest turnout in presidential elections was 85.2% in
2009 and the lowest was 50.6% in 1993.
Khamenei, not the president, has the last say on Iran’s nuclear and
foreign policies, therefore a Raisi win would not disrupt Iran's bid
to revive the agreement and break free of tough oil and financial
sanctions.
ECONOMIC MISERY
With economic misery palpable at home, Iran's rulers cannot risk
starting the talks from scratch after the election, as the ruling
clerics are aware their political fortunes rely on tackling
worsening economic hardship.
"Eruption of protests will be inevitable if he fails to heal the
nation's economic pain," a government official said, referring to
Raisi.
Raisi's record as a hardline judge accused of abuses could worry
Washington and liberal Iranians, analysts said, especially given
President Joe Biden's focus on human rights globally.
A mid-ranking figure in the hierarchy of Iran’s Shi’ite Muslim
clergy, Raisi was appointed by Khamenei to the high-profile job of
judiciary chief in 2019.
A few months later, Washington sanctioned him for alleged human
rights violations, including the executions of political prisoners
in 1980s and the suppression of unrest in 2009, events in which he
played a part, according to human rights groups.
Iran has never acknowledged the mass executions, and Raisi himself
has never publicly addressed allegations about his role.
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Raisi's main rival is former central bank governor Abdolnaser
Hemmati, who says a win for any hardliner will result in yet more
sanctions imposed by outside powers.
Raisi says he backs Iran's talks with major powers to revive the
nuclear deal, under which Iran agreed to curbs on its nuclear
programme in return for the lifting of sanctions.
(Writing by Parisa Hafezi, Editing by William Maclean)
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