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WSWS : News
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East : Iran
Khatami confirmed as president of Iran
Iranian establishment closes ranks against the population
By Justus Leicht
14 June 2001
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The widely anticipated landslide re-election of Iran's President
Mohammed Khatami has been hailed by all factions of the Iranian
government and the Western media as an expression of the Iranian
people's trust in his policies and the apparent ability
of the Islamic Republic to undertake democratic change.
In reality, the vote expresses a clear rejection of the de
facto rule of religious hard-liners that Khatami was able to benefit
from due to the lack of an alternativedespite his politics.
He represents not so much a democratic opposition as the left
wing of the reactionary clerical regime itself, which closes ranks
every time it comes under pressure from the masses. This is the
case once again following Khatami's overwhelming election victory.
The final results of the election held last Friday were made
known on Sunday. According to the state news agency IRNA, Khatami
received 21 million out of a total of 28 million votesapproximately
1 million more votes than in the last election four years ago.
Khatami received over 77 percent of the votes this time, compared
with 69 percent in 1997.
His conservative rivals performed correspondingly poorlydespite
their combined efforts to present themselves as independent and
open in regard to democratic rights. The most important conservative
organisations and personalities even refrained from openly speaking
out in support of any of the nine conservative candidates, afraid
that their mere endorsement might discredit him.
The former minister of labour and economic scientist Ahmed
Tavakoli came second with 15 percent of the vote. He was regarded
as the clandestine candidate of the right-wing and was supported
in particular by the fanatical religious militia, the Bassij.
Third in the voting was rear admiral and former minister of defence
Ali Shamkhani with 2.5 percent. The rest of the candidates each
received less than 1 percent. Ali Fallahian, the former head of
the secret police who is the subject of an international arrest
warrant because of his presumed involvement in numerous murders,
received just 55,000 votes.
It is necessary to bear in mind the thoroughly undemocratic
character of the Iranian electoral process. The first qualification
for participation as a candidate was absolute loyalty to the system
of Velayet-e-Faqih (Rule of the religious Jurists), which allocates
all powers of decision in the last instance to the Islamic clergynot
the populace. Candidacy for the election was decided upon by the
Council of Guardians, which is dominated by right-wing clerics.
It rejected 99 percent of the candidates (including all the women)
in a thoroughly arbitrary manner. Without giving any reasons,
the Council of Guardians rejected every single alternative candidate
from the camp of the reformers, thus leaving Khatami
without any serious challengea measure which met no serious
opposition from the reformers themselves.
The Council of Guardians is also required to confirm the results
of the election. In order to remind everybody of its powers, the
Council made murky references at the weekend regarding apparent
irregularities that are supposed to have taken place in the elections.
Reports on voter participation were somewhat contradictory.
Both the Iranian and international media reported massive
participation, with polling station hours being extended on no
less than three occasions on Friday. Voting finally came to an
end at midnight.
Nevertheless, it appears that the total vote is smaller than
at the last election. Four years ago 83 percent of eligible voters
(29 out of 35 million people) took part, one of the highest totals
in the history of the Islamic Republic. This time 67 percent (28
out of 42 million) voted. Prior to the election, Khatami's government
had predicted that between 80 and 90 percent of the population
would vote.
A report in the June 6 Financial Times Deutschland made
clear the extent of the disillusionment amongst Khatami supporters:
When Khatami called last week in the overflowing Tehran
Shirudi Stadium for a repudiation of extremism' and urged
his supporters to moderation' thousands left the arena.
The end of his long awaited election campaign speech (we
want democracy together with religion and spiritual life') took
place before half-empty rows of seats.
There are three related reasons for the overwhelming majority
that returned Khatami to office:
First, the complete discrediting of the most reactionary faction.
When one adds together all the votes for conservative candidates,
it is clear that they lost around 2.7 million votes compared with
the last election.
Second, the mobilisation of young voters. An additional 7 million
first-time voters took part in Friday's election (young people
are able to vote at 15 in Iran). The highest rate of voter participation
was registered among young people and the vast majority are estimated
to have cast ballots for Khatami. Newspaper reports described
15-year-old youths distributing photographs of the president,
criticising Iran's supreme religious leader Ayatollah
Khamenei at election meetings and attacking the Mullahs with cries
such as Death to the Taliban!
This was evidently in response in part to the intensification
of repression over the past months: newspapers have been banned,
bizarre confessions have been made by arrested student
leaders and the Bassij has increased its activity as the policeman
of public morals. According to one newspaper report, young people
boasted to their friends that they had been whipped merely for
attending parties. In May a dispute erupted in Tehran when a group
of religious fanatics abused a young girl complaining that her
head scarf was not tightly enough secured and a group of students
came to her assistance.
The third and decisive factor for the Khatami victory was the
lack of any viable alternatives. This was not merely the outcome
of the systematic repression by the judiciary and security forces
of any opposition striking a more radical pose than Khatamiwho
himself declined to criticise such actions. The main problem is
the general lack of orientation and the politically confused and
socially heterogeneous nature of the widespread opposition.
In a commentary the June 11, the German Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung observed: Political Islam is the only ideology
with broad appeal in the region. Western secularism is regarded
as repulsiveeven by young Iranians. They dream of their
own Iranian way, which they are unable to define concretely. As
a result, and despite the widespread dissatisfaction, attempts
to form a strong movement of political opposition have been unsuccessful
up to now. In the long run the Islamic regime is threatened by
internal erosion, loss of credibility, economic decline, mass
unemployment and possible violent chaotic rebellions rather than
by a revolutionary opposition intent on overthrow.
The country has foreign debts totalling $9 billion, an official
inflation rate of 20 percent and an unofficial unemployment rate
of up to 30 percent. Despite Iran's enormous oil wealth, around
40 percent of the population live below the poverty level. According
to Werner Schoeltzke, chairman of the Middle and Far Eastern Organisation
of German Business, Iran would need 750,000 new jobs per year
to meet its population's needs.
Social tensions are so pronounced that even the reactionary
clerics speak of reform. It appears, however, that the regime
favours the Chinese type of reforms, economic reforms
accompanied by continuing political repression.
On election day Khatami called upon the conservatives to work
together with him: All forces in our society must cooperate
so that the historic aspirations of the Iranian people will be
fulfilled. When his victory was assured, he warned his supporters
in his customary manner to exercise patience and moderation.
Religious leader Khamenei also spoke out in favour of collaboration:
Today the rivalry ends, and I say to everyone that they
must put their rivalries aside, and help the next president solve
the problems of the country. Hashemi Rafsanjani and other
leading conservatives made similar comments. Their aim is to drive
ahead with economic liberalisation while avoiding any sort of
political liberalisation.
On Saturday the state news agency IRNA reported a statement
by the leading conservative politician Hamid Reza Taraqi: The
unrestrained freedom in the first term of office of President
Khatami led to desecration of sanctities and insults to personalities,
including the president himself,' he [Taraqi] said. He recommended
that President Khatami consider political rivalry as a fait accompli
and make use of competent technocrats to boost solidarity and
work on solving the major issues (economic problems) of the country.
Khatami appears to be willing to respond to this demand. He
made that clear during the election campaign. According to CNN,
he declared to a group of bazaar merchants: Any government
that comes to power should create job opportunities for young
people.... Investors play an important role in this. Investment
security should prepare the grounds for investment to flourish.
After the election he made similar comments: The urgent
demand of today and tomorrow is to instil and deepen republicanism,
give back the legitimate rights of the people in line with the
(Islamic) religion, identify priorities in the economic field
and solve basic problems of the society under a prudent agenda.
The Washington Post reported that according to Khatami's
brother Mohammed Reza, a leader of the reformers,
the top priority now is the restructuring of the national
budgetsomething which could lead to conflicts with
the hard-liners, who influence large parts of the
national economy through their control of religious institutions.
Nevertheless, it appears that the Council of Guardians has decided
not to block a law passed in May facilitating investment.
The decisive contradiction is not between so-called conservatives
and so-called reformers, but between the entire establishment
and the broad working masses. The implementation of deregulation
and privatisation, the prerequisite for a considerable inflow
of investment, means that conflicts with the working class are
inevitable. This is the main reason for Khatami's vehement rejection
of any sort of popular mobilisation and why he continually warns
the conservatives of the threat arising from the people. Any significant
mobilisation would immediately bring to the surface the most varied
social layers who all have their very different interpretations
of reforms and democracy.
Despite the calls for moderation and collaboration,
events following the election point to the intensification of
conflicts in the future. In a number of cities youth celebrating
the election result were promptly turned on by religious militias
and arrested by the police.
See Also:
Iran: political crisis overshadows
presidential campaign
[31 May 2001]
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