Friday, December 26, 2008

Khatami calls for management reform

IRNA: Former Iranian president Seyyed Mohammad Khatami has called on the government to take measures to reform the management system.


“We should do our outmost to reform the current management system if we seek to serve the interests of the Iranian nation,” Khatami said Saturday.


He made the remarks in a meeting with supporters who have called on the Iranian figure to seek a third presidency. He, however, seems reluctant to return to the political arena.


Khatami said reforms should be rooted in the management's structure and attitude in order to achieve the "ideals of the Islamic Revolution in accordance with the Constitution.”


The Iranian cleric, who was elected president in 1997 and served in office for two terms, said the next year's presidential election would be the ideal opportunity for Iranians to express the need for reforms.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

All Principalists will align against Khatami

PressTV reports: A Principalist party says that Iran's Principalists will get aligned against former president Khatami if he contests the election.

"The Principalists would adopt a united policy against Khatami if he returns to politics, though his victory sounds a bit far-fetched," Secretary General of the Islamic Coalition Party Mohammad-Nabi Habibi told reporters on Wednesday.


The party is one of the major members of the Principalist camp.
Habibi claimed an unlikely victory and a decrease in votes for the Reformist cleric in the upcoming 2009 presidential elections compared to his first victory in June 1997.


There are suggestions that some Principalists prefer former president Mohammad Khatami to represent Reformists at the presidential race, which would boost the possibility of introducing the incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as their sole contender in the next presidential elections in June 2009.


Analysts, however, believe that the participation of multiple Reformist candidates would put the Principalist camp's unity in jeopardy, causing several Principalists to run for president.


Former two-time president Khatami is on the horns of a dilemma, saying his bid for presidency counts on how far it can push justice and democracy in the country.


Addressing a host of students at Tehran University in mid December, Khatami said any candidate for the upcoming presidential vote must be able to determine to what extent the present mechanisms permit him to implement his plans.


The 65-year-old Reformist highlighted that "in case the possibility of implementing plans does not really exist… even the best and most comprehensive plans would fall flat on face when put into practice."

Mohammad Khatami won the presidency in 1997 and 2001 with an overwhelming 20 million and 22 million votes respectively. President Ahmadinejad, a Principalist, won over 17 million votes in the second round of the 2005 elections.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Reformers pushing for Khatami nomination

Tehran Times reports: A senior member of the Islamic Revolution Mojahedin Organization (IRMO) insisted that most members of the reformist front hold a similar opinion that Mohammad Khatami should stand as their favored candidate in the next year’s presidential election.

The reason behind their insistence is Khatami’s unique personality traits, Abdollah Naseri told the Mehr News Agency on Monday.
Almost all members of the Coordination Council of Reformist Front are waiting for Khatami to announce his candidacy, he said, adding that they hope Khatami’s response will be positive.


Stating that the coordination council sets the date for declaring nomination by potential candidates, he said the council’s prediction is that Khatami would announce his candidacy in the near future.


Some reformist groups believe that Khatami will probably announce his candidacy during the Ten Day Dawn marking the anniversary of the Islamic Revolution, Naseri added.


Pointing to the students’ request of Khatami to contest the election as he addressed them at Tehran University on December 15, he said students were among the first social groups who welcomed Khatami candidacy in the previous presidential elections.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Why Ahmadinejad Fears Khatami

By Amir Taheri

Aawsat.com: The Islamic Republic in Iran is facing "a sinister international conspiracy" designed to "replace religious rule with secularism." The plot was allegedly hatched by a "secret society of Freemasons" known as the Bilderberg Group whose members include many of the Western world's richest and most powerful businessmen and politicians.

The alleged conspiracy was finalized at a secret meeting of the group in June 1999 in Caesar Park Hotel in the Portuguese resort of Penha Longa. Inside Iran, the executors of the "plot" included the so-called Reform Movement symbolized by former President Mohammed Khatami who attended the meeting along with his then assistant on environmental affairs Mrs. Massoumeh Ebtekar.

The so-called Bilderberg "lodge" is often described by conspiracy theorists as "the secret government of the world".

According to the report published by IRNA, the "plot" included building up Abdul-Karim Sorush, a self-styled philosopher and erstwhile Khatami protégé, as "the Martin Luther of Islam" with a message of separating religion from politics. They also tried to "transform Khatami into an Islamic [version of Mikhail] Gorbachev."

Wow! A tall story from the rumor-mills in the marshlands of the Internet?

Not at all. The claim comes in a lengthy report published by the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA), the official organ of the Khomeinist regime in Tehran.

The claim is worth noting for two reasons.

The first is that it is presented by the official organ of the state. Claims that the former president had a part in foreign plots against the regime have been made by radical Khomeinist groups and websites since 2005 when Khatami's eight-year presidency ended. However, this is the first time that such a claim is given prominence by mainstream organs of the regime.

The accusation was first published by the mass-circulation daily newspaper Kayhan whose Editor-in-Chief is appointed by the "Supreme Guide" Ali Khamenei. The paper, which has promised "more sensational revelations", has often been used for character-assassination campaigns against critics of the regime, and makes no secret of its dislike for Khatami and his supposedly "reformist" supporters.

Putting the claims on IRNA, however, marks a new step in the campaign against Khatami.

The second reason why the episode is worth noting is that it indicates a dramatic intensification of the power struggle in Tehran. The radical revolutionary groups led by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad are beginning to fear a possible Khatami candidacy in next June's presidential elections.

However, before we deal with the political implications of the campaign let us first deal with its substance.

Strictly speaking, there is no such thing as the Bilderberg Group or Masonic lodge. What we have is an annual private meeting of influential individuals, mostly from Europe and the United States, designed to generate free discussions on a range of issues without a pre-set agenda and according to the so-called Chatam House rules under which there are no reports of the proceedings and none of the participants could be quoted by name.

The first meeting was held at Hotel de Bilderberg near Arnhem in Holland in 1954 at the invitation of Prince Bernhard, the husband of the then Queen Juliana. The number of guests was fixed at 130 and initially only limited to politicians, academics and business people from member countries of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Later, the meeting extended its reach and started inviting personalities from all over the world, according to which countries happened to be in the news. The invitations were designed to include two representatives from each country, one liberal and one conservative.

Over the past half a century, almost anybody who was somebody in international business or politics has made at least one appearance at the group's annual meetings. Thus, if this were a gathering of conspirators we would have to assume that virtually the whole of the global leadership elite consists of Masonic plotters. Last June, for example, Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama both attended the Bilderberg meeting along with more than 60 other political figures from across the globe.

From the late 1960s until 1977, a number of Iranian politicians, academics and business people attended one or more of the group’s gatherings - always with the understanding that they were there as private individuals. However, no Iranians were invited after the Khomeinist seizure of power in 1979. That such invitations were resumed in 1999 indicated the hopes raised by Khatami that the Islamic Republic could close its revolutionary phase and return to the mainstream as a normal nation-state.

The IRNA campaign against Khatami shows that those hopes were premature. Even if one assumes that Khatami was sincere in his desire to normalize the Islamic Republic, the election of President Ahmadinejad showed that a majority of Khomeinists who provide the regime's support-base reject such change.

Nevertheless, the question has not gone away.

Many within the Khomeinist establishment realize that a majority of Iranians are tired of Khomeinism and desire normalization. The next presidential election, to be held in June, is likely to be fought on that issue. And Khatami is coming under pressure from inside and outside Iran to stand for election again, challenging Ahmadinejad's radicalism with a message of reform and moderation.

The IRNA report shows that the radical factions fear a Khatami candidacy and are trying to terrorize him into not becoming a candidate. As always, the Khomeinists shun serious arguments. They prefer accusing their critics of atheism, secularism or, as in this case, collaboration with foreign conspiracies.

The tactic may work against Khatami who has never been much of a fighter. But even if Khatami does not enter the presidential race, the main question will remain: how should Iran come out of the impasse created by a bankrupt ideology?

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Pressure on Khatami to run again

By Najmeh Bozorgmehr

Mohammad Khatami, the former reformist president of Iran, receives dozens of visitors who travel to Tehran to pay their respects.

Sitting on carpets in a spacious living room, the visitors, who come from all walks of life, are united in their demand: they want Mr Khatami to run for president in next June's election and end the era of Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad.

The pressure on the 65-year-old cleric, who served as president for two terms before Mr AhmadiNejad, has intensified in recent weeks.

People from dozens of provinces across Iran have been streaming to his office, arguing that he is the only politician with sufficient popular support to beat Mr Ahmadi-Nejad - who is expected to run, although he has not yet declared his candidacy. Those clamouring for Mr Khatami's return include many reformists but also some prominent conservative politicians.

In a meeting attended by the Financial Times this month, one student representative told Mr Khatami that if he decides not to run, he will be ignoring the wishes of students, women and workers.

A woman activist joins in, saying a political leader should not stand back and expect to be invited to Iran's power circles - he must fight for his place. "If we stand up and move forward, then we will not be ashamed before God, the country and history," she says.

The emotional pleas, some laced with poetic verses, move the cleric to tears.

Mr Khatami tells his visitors that if he is hesitating, it is not because he is afraid of the challenge. The former president says he is not looking for a comfortable, non-controversial life. He simply wants to make sure that his candidacy would help, rather than exacerbate the country's problems.

But, should he become president again, Mr Khatami vows, he would not compromise on his call for a more democratic government.

The former president tells his guests that economic development cannot be achieved without democracy. "In this country democracy must rule . . . freedom must be defended," he says.

Next year's poll comes at a crucial time in Iran's nuclear dispute with the west. Although Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, has the final say on nuclear policy, the president has significant influence.

Iran's presidential election comes as the US looks for a possible shift in policy towards Tehran, with the new administration of Barack Obama expected to try to launch a dialogue.

Officially, Mr Khatami has until April to register as a candidate but he is expected to make up his mind much sooner. Although some of those close to him say the pressure to run is becoming intolerable, Mr Khatami's reluctance is born out of his troubled experience during the two terms he served from 1997 to 2005.

His push to provide greater freedom to political and human rights activists was not always successful while many ordinary people felt his presidency ignored their daily economic struggles. The surprising 2005 victory of Mr Ahmadi-Nejad, a radical conservative, was a harsh blow to reformists. Iran's hardliners have continued to undermine the reformists since, hoping to prevent them making a comeback.

Mr Khatami's supporters say they have more realistic expectations of what he can deliver if he were to become president again.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Iran's Khatami Mulls Run for Presidency

By Thomas Erdbrink, Washington Post Foreign Service

Former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami reacts during a conference in Tehran, Iran, Sunday, Dec. 14, 2008. Calls have been steadily growing for Khatami to come out of political retirement.Former Iranian president Mohammad Khatami, an opponent of current President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's policies, said Monday that he is still pondering a bid for the country's highest political office directly elected by the people.

During a speech before hundreds of Tehran University students, who chanted slogans in support of his potential candidacy, Khatami said, "I'm not saying I won't run, I'm just saying that I'm still thinking it over."

"Khatami forever, future president," the students, some of whom demonstrated last week against Ahmadinejad, shouted several times, according to the Iranian Students News Agency.

The former president, who during two terms spanning 1997 to 2005 clashed with several of the country's powerful unelected political institutions, told the students that Iran's "problems" couldn't be solved in one day.

"People's expectations are very high. They want everything to be solved in one night," he told the students, who broke into the auditorium hours before the speech to prevent government supporters from taking their seats, eyewitnesses said. Foreign journalists were banned from entering university grounds.

Ahmadinejad hasn't registered yet as a candidate, but he is expected to run for a second term. If Khatami becomes a candidate, Ahmadinejad, whose management of Iran's oil-dependent economy has come under sometimes harsh criticism, would face a serious competitor.

Ahmadinejad and Khatami are on opposite sides of the Iranian political spectrum -- with the president representing a socially conservative, economically populist wing and the former president favoring more personal freedoms and a stronger civil society within the Islamic republic.

"If Khatami would run, it would mean that the elections will be between only two main candidates," said Iraj Jamshidi, a journalist with the newspaper Donya Eghtesad, which is critical of Ahmadinejad's policies.

Khatami, a Shiite Muslim cleric, was elected twice by large majorities of the popular vote. In addition to promising more civil liberties and political freedoms, he pledged to end Iran's isolation in world affairs. By the end of his administration, many of his supporters were disappointed with his inability to fulfill those pledges. Some of his political appointees were suspected of corruption.

During his campaign, Ahmadinejad promised to spend Iran's oil income on programs directly helping the poor. But inflation and unemployment have risen sharply, and in many urban areas, his popularity seems to have dropped.

"Those promises were made for getting votes," said Amir Mohebbian, an analyst who once supported Ahmadinejad's political faction. "They both promised gigantic changes which were not doable."

Only Mehdi Karroubi, a centrist cleric who finished third in the 2005 presidential election, has officially announced his candidacy.

The mayor of Tehran, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, a former Revolutionary Guard commander who presents himself as a technocrat, is contemplating a run. So is Mostafa Pourmohammadi, Ahmadinejad's former interior minister.

During his years as president, Khatami battled several powerful state institutions, including the 12-member Guardian Council, which has the right to disqualify candidates running for office and veto laws proposed by the elected government and parliament. Even presidential candidates must be vetted by the Guardian Council, whose members are appointed by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

In 2004, the council blocked almost all of Khatami's parliamentary supporters from participating in elections. Their seats were won by the faction affiliated with Ahmadinejad.

"In my time, it was said by state television that there is poverty, corruption, high prices and unemployment, but today -- thank God -- everything is great," Khatami told the students in apparent sarcasm.

According to Iran's central bank, inflation is at historic highs, reaching nearly 30 percent on a month-to-month basis.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Arson brings down major Iran theater

Leila HatamiPresstv reports: Tehran Fire Department officials say the recent attack on one of the city's oldest movie theaters had been carried out deliberately.

"The comprehensive investigation carried out by fire department experts has revealed that the fire at Cinema Jomhouri was deliberate," Tehran Fire Chief Mohammad-Reza Hajji-Beigi said in comments posted on the department's website on Sunday.

Tehran Fire Department put damages caused by the incident at around 25 to 30 thousand US dollars.

While the fire chief refrained from elaborating on the details of the incident, he did refer reporters to judicial and insurance officials, who are expected to receive a full report from the department in the coming days.

The fire department's announcement comes amid growing speculations that that the incident may have been politically motivated, according to a Monday article published by Iranian daily Sarmayeh.

"There are three rumors surrounding the incident. Some attribute the attack to Leila Hatami's support for (former president Mohammad) Khatami. Others, however, say that the owners of the cinema had set the building on fire to collect insurance benefits," reported the paper.

"The third theory is that the attack, neither politically-motivated nor planned by the owners, was carried out by a third party that had a personal grudge against the owners," it added.

Leila Hatami is a prominent Iranian actress and a chief movie theater stakeholder.

Cinema Jomhouri is a historic cultural center situated in the heart of the Iranian capital of Tehran.

The cinema, initially called Niagara, was first opened by deceased actor Mohammad-Ali Fardin and later purchased by Leila Hatami's father -- writer and director Ali Hatami -- who passed away in 1995.