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Published 18 May, 2013 07:32am

Rafsanjani hits back at hardline pro-regime rivals

LONDON: Hashemi Rafsanjani, the dark horse heavyweight candidate in Iran’s presidential election, has hit back at hardline pro-regime figures who are alarmed by his growing popularity to insist that he has a “religious and national duty” to run — and defiantly accused his detractors of harming the Islamic revolution.

Politicians close to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country’s “supreme leader”, are urging that the veteran cleric be disqualified after he submitted his candidacy in an electrifying move last weekend — just minutes before registration closed.

It had been assumed that Iran’s election would be a closed contest between loyal and officially-approved conservatives. But although much could change before polling day on June 14, there is now growing support for Rafsanjani’s candidacy from followers of Mir Hossein Mousavi, the Green movement leader who claims his 2009 election victory was “stolen” by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

“You should see who is supporting Rafsanjani and who wants him to be a candidate for the election,” warned Gholam Haddad Adel, a pro-Khamenei figure. “The reformists of 2009 are gathering behind Rafsanjani and the truth is that the people who supported Mir Hossein Mousavi in 2009 are now supporting Rafsanjani.”

Green activists are setting up Facebook pages to mobilise support for Rafsanjani’s campaign. Mousavi and fellow reformist Mehdi Karroubi remain under house arrest and are banned from political activity.

Mohammed, Karroubi’s son, said Rafsanjani would now win the support of those who voted for change in 2009 but instead got Ahmadinejad for a second term. “The majority of the Green movement feel they now have a voice in this election,” he told us.

Speaking on Thursday to Tehran University students, Rafsanjani struck a confident note. “I entered the race to perform my religious and national duty given the country’s situation... and its problems at home and abroad,” the Mehr news website reported. “Certain people and movements have resorted to lying and falsification and slurs to discredit others. These people, intentionally or unintentionally, are harming the Islamic revolution.”

Rafsanjani, now 79, is a household name in Iran. He was a confidant of Ayatollah Khomeini and a co-architect of the Islamic Republic who has served as speaker of parliament and president.

Known as “the shark” — a reference to his cunning as well as his unusually sparse beard — Rafsanjani effectively ran the bloody eight-year war against Iraq, launched by Saddam Hussein in 1980 when he believed that the post-revolutionary chaos would prevent Iran from mounting a robust defence.

In 1988 he was credited with having persuaded a reluctant Khomeini to sue for peace with Iraq. It is also believed that he played an important role in the choice of Khamenei as Khomeini’s successor. But the two fell out after Rafsanjani lost to Ahmadinejad in the 2005 election.

Over the years he has acquired a reputation for being canny and pragmatic — as well as very rich from his pistachio-farming family inheritance and later business dealings. In 2003, Forbes estimated Rafsanjani’s own wealth at over $1bn, an astronomical sum in Iran. His reputation has suffered from widespread allegations of corruption, which he denies.

The US and other western governments will be watching for any evidence that he might take a softer line on the contentious issue of Iran’s nuclear programme — the cause of the harsh sanctions that are exacerbating the country’s structural economic problems.Until last weekend Rafsanjani had said he would only stand with the permission of Khamenei and he reportedly went ahead after receiving a call from the supreme leader’s office. That, and his position as head of the expediency council, which mediates between parliament and the Guardian Council, means that the latter body — charged with vetting the candidates — is unlikely to disqualify him.

In a country where rumour and labyrinthine conspiracy theories are the stuff of political discourse, some believe he may have been set up as a counterweight to Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, Ahamadinejad’s controversial former chief of staff — who is loathed and feared by Khamenei and the conservatives.

“This is a classic divide and rule operation,” argued Ali Ansari of St Andrews University. “Khamenei put two people out there who cancel each other out.”

No one has forgotten how, in the wake of the 2009 repression, Rafsanjani spoke out critically for the opposition, urging the establishment, security forces, parliament and protesters all to act within the law.

Rafsanjani has been isolated for the past four years and his children have fallen foul of the regime. Last September, his son Mehdi Hashemi was detained after returning from self-imposed exile in the UK. He is now out of prison but being tried. Rafsanjani’s daughter, Faezeh, an activist and former MP, was sentenced to six months in prison after being found guilty of “spreading propaganda against the regime”.

Kouhyar Goudarzi, a prominent human rights activist who was jailed in 2009 and now lives in exile in Turkey, said: “If there’s the slightest hope for change, that can only be achieved by Rafsanjani, given the country’s current situation.”

By arrangement with the Guardian

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