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TEHRAN, May 28 (Xinhuanet) -- Iranian reformist
Mostafa Moin has decided to run for the presidency, the official IRNA news
agency reported on Saturday.
Moin will release a statement to formally declare his candidacy for the election, Issa Saharkhiz, head of publicity
committee of Moin's election campaign headquarters, was quoted as saying.
Moin, former Higher Education minister and well-known
pioneer reformist politician, was disqualified from standing in the race bythe
country's hardline election and legislation supervisory body, the Guardians
Council, on May 22.
In addition, Vice-President Mohsen Mehralizadeh was
rejected to stand in the race due to his high-profile reformist politics.
But the Guardians Council's decision was retracted
two days later under the order of Iran's Supreme Leader Seyed Ali Khamenei.
Moin had previously said that he would reject to
participating in the race in protest of the Guardian Council even though the
bodyhad changed its mind.
Some of his supporters also suggested that Moin and
the reformist camp boycott the election because they could not accept the
qualification granted by undemocratic means.
Iran's ninth presidential elections will be held on
June 17. Registration of candidates was held on May 10-14 and more than 1,000
people registered to participate in the elections.
The Guardians Council at first approved only six
candidates -- former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, former parliament head
Mahdi Karroubi, former police chief Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, formerstate
broadcasting body chief Ali Larijani, Tehran Mayor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and
former head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Mohsen Rezaei.
Incumbent President Mohammad Khatami is excluded from
the race because the law bans anyone from running for a third consecutive term.
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