6
qualified candidates for upcoming presidential race in Iran
The one-month race of Iranian candidates for presidential position started on early hours of Friday day and will be followed by a waiting period until May 18.
The one-month race of Iranian candidates for presidential position started on early hours of Friday day and will be followed by a waiting period until May 18.
Out of 1636 registered candidates, six
qualified candidates, including three principalists, or conservatives as they
are commonly referred to, plus three centrists and reformist for four-year
terms.
For May 19 vote, the centrists, led by the
President Hassan Rouhani, are hoping not to lose their current sovereignty.
The following is a biography of the six
qualified candidates for the post announced on Thursday by Iran's Guardian
Council of the Constitution as the highest legislative body of the country.
HASSAN ROUHANI
Hassan Rouhani was born on November 12,
1948. Rouhani is an Iranian politician and cleric who became the president of
Iran in 2013. He began attending a seminary in Iran's Semnan province in the
1960s before travelling to Qom to complete his clerical training. He also
studied at the University of Tehran, graduating in 1972 with a degree in law.
He was arrested several times in the 1960s and 1970s for his opposition to the
rule of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi and his support for the late founder of the
Islamic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. He fled Iran in 1977 and joined Khomeini
in exile in France in 1978.
Rouhani returned to Iran after the Iranian
revolution of 1979. He was elected to the parliament, also known as the Majlis,
serving five consecutive terms between 1980 and 2000. He also held a variety of
posts relating to national security during the Iran-Iraq War (1980-88). He
served as a member of the High Council for National Defense and as the commander
of Iran's air defenses. In 1989, he was appointed as the secretary of the
Supreme National Security Council, a position that he occupied under centrist
president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani (1989-97) and reformist president Mohammad
Khatami (1997-2005). While serving in government, Rouhani continued his
academic work, earning a Ph.D. from Glasgow Caledonian University in 1999 with
a dissertation on Islamic law.
Between 2003 and 2005, Rouhani led the
Iranian delegation in negotiations with the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) and the international community regarding Iran's nuclear energy program.
In that position, he developed a reputation among Western diplomats for
moderation and pragmatism, but some hard-liners in Iran objected to Iranian concessions
that included increased inspections and a temporary suspension of uranium
enrichment. Rouhani resigned as Iran's chief nuclear negotiator and as the
secretary of the Supreme National Security Council following the election of
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president in 2005.
In March 2013, Rouhani entered the race for
president, positioning himself as a critic of the outgoing Ahmadinejad's
economic policies and confrontational approach to foreign affairs. He also
stated that he would support restarting international negotiations regarding
Iran's nuclear program in hopes of reducing sanctions against Iran. In Sept.
2013, he launched a diplomatic campaign to improve Iranian engagement with the
West. His conciliatory overtures led to a telephone call with then U.S.
President Barack Obama in late September, the first direct conversation between
a U.S. and an Iranian leader since 1979.
Rouhani's pledge to restart international
dialogue regarding Iran's nuclear activities was fulfilled in early November
2013 with the opening of talks between Iran and P5+1 comprising the United
States, China, Russia, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom. An agreement
was reached in July 2015 that required Iran to reduce its nuclear stockpile and
allow inspections of its nuclear facilities in exchange for gradual reduction
of sanctions.
In domestic policy, he has encouraged
personal freedom and free access to information, has improved women's rights by
appointing female Foreign Ministry spokespeople and has improved the economy by
reducing inflation and raising the growth rate.
MOHAMMED BAQER QALIBAF
Qalibaf was born in 1961 and holds a
doctorate degree in political geography. He is an Iranian conservative
politician, former military officer and is currently serving as the Mayor of
Tehran. He began his military career during the Iran-Iraq War in 1980s. After
the end of the war in 1988, he became managing director of Khatam al-Anbia, an
engineering firm affiliated to Iran's Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC). He
served as the commander of the IRGC air force from 1996 to 1999. After large
student protests in 1999, Qalibaf was appointed the national chief of police by
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei from 2000 to 2005. As the police
chief he allowed women to join the force and set up electronic police services.
Qalibaf has been the mayor of the capital
Tehran since 2005. As a mayor, he has won plaudits for building up the
capital's infrastructure, improving public transportation, expanding subway, constructing
bridges and highways and establishing new parks. He is also a pilot, certified
to fly certain Airbus aircraft. Qalibaf ran for president in 2005, when he came
in fourth place with just under 14 percent of the vote. He was also a candidate
in the 2013 presidential election but lost to Rouhani, in second place.
EBRAHIM RAISI
Ebrahim Raisi was born on December 14, 1960.
He entered Qom Seminary at the age of 15. According to his official biography,
he holds a master's degree in the field of "International Private
Law" from an undisclosed institution and was also graduated with a Ph.D.
in "jurisprudence and fundamentals of Islamic law" from Shahid
Motahari University.
In 1981, he was appointed the prosecutor of
Iran's Karaj city. After four months, he was appointed as Prosecutor of Hamadan
Province. He was appointed as deputy prosecutor of Tehran in 1985. After three
years, he received special provisions from the late founder of the Islamic
Republic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to address legal issues in some provinces
like Lorestan, Semnan and Kermanshah. After Khomeini's death and election of
Khamenei as the new Supreme Leader, Raisi was appointed as Tehran prosecutor.
He held the office for five years from 1989 to 1994. In 1994, he was appointed
as head of General Inspection Office.
From 2004 until 2014, Raisi served as first
deputy chief of justice of Iran. He was later appointed as Attorney-General of
Iran in 2014, a position that he served until 2016. Raisi was appointed by
Khamenei on March 7, 2016 as the custodian and chairman of the Shrine of Shiite
Imam Reza in the northeastern Iranian city of Mashhad. He officially announced
his nomination in a statement published on April 6, and called it his
"religious and revolutionary responsibility to run", citing the need
for a "fundamental change in the executive management of the country"
and a government that "fights poverty and corruption."
Raisi, who is commonly believed to be the
main conservative rival of President Rouhani, called for "respect to the
law" by both people and the officials. Democracy and democratic elections
are attainable by reference to the people's vote and respect to the law, he
said.
ESHAQ JAHANGIRI
Jahangiri was
born on January 10, 1957. He graduated from University of Kerman with a degree
of B.Sc. in physics. He was active in revolutionary groups prior to the Iranian
revolution (in 1979) and once was wounded by the forces of the Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi. He later received his Ph.D from Iran University of Science and
Technology in industrial engineering. Jahangiri began his political career
following the Iranian revolution. He became deputy head of the agriculture
department in Kerman in July 1980. Then, he was appointed its head in 1982. He
was elected to the Iranian Majlis in 1984 election and served for two terms. He
was appointed governor of Isfahan city 1992. He held the position until 1997
when he was picked by the reformist president Mohammad Khatami as the minister
of Mines and Metals. His portfolio was later changed to the minister of
Industries and Mines and he held that position until 2005.
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