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| Tehran mayor Mahmood Ahmadinejad at a press
conference a day after elections, in Tehran, Iran, Saturday, June 18,
2005.Former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and conservative Tehran
mayor Mahmood Ahmadinejad will go to the runoff of Iran's ninth
presidential election, the Interior Ministry announced late Saturday after
finishing vote count. (Xinhua/AFP photo) |
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| Mayor of Tehran and Iran's ultra conservative presidential candidate Mahmud Ahmadinejad is seen at a press conference in Tehran, capital of Iran June 18, 2005. (Xinhua photo) |
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| File photo of Iran's former president Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani. (Xinhua/AFP photo) |
TEHRAN, June 18 (Xinhuanet) -- Former president Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani and conservative Tehran mayor Mahmood Ahmadinejad will go to
the runoff of Iran's ninth presidential election, the Interior Ministry
announced late Saturday after finishing vote count.
According to the ministry statistics, Rafsanjani and
Ahmadinejad have garnered 6,159,453 and 5,710,354 eligible votes respectively,
which account for 21 percent and 19 percent of the total eligible votes of
29,317,420, state television reported.
The final result was announced about 2 hours after
some media reported Ahmadinejad's entrance while he himself also claimed so.
The dragging vote count in Tehran, where there are
reportedly 1,221,940 invalid votes, is to be blamed for the late result, but
there is no explanation about the prolonged counting.
Former Majlis (parliament) Speaker Mehdi Karoubi
stands at the third in the race with 5,066,316 votes, and he was surpassed by
Ahmadinejad at the last minute after holding the second position with a slight
dominance for almost a whole day.
Former police chief Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf has
collected 4,075,189 and Mostafa Moin, a radical reformist former Higher
Education Minister, has gotten 4,054,304.
Former state broadcasting body chief Ali Larijani and
Vice President Mohsen Mehralizadeh are at the end of the list, with 1,740,163
and 1,289,323 votes in hand respectively.
Polling for Iran's presidential election ended on
Friday at 11:00 p.m. local time (1830 GMT).
The Interior Ministry said that some 32 million among
46.7 million eligible voters cast votes across the country.
The runoff will be held on next Friday, or June 24.
Rafsanjani, who served two terms as president from
1989 to 1997,is well known for his expertise in economic factor and political
wisdoms as well as muscles to carry out realistically mild reforms,has therefore
become a widely accepted figure to counter the difficulties confronting Iran.
As a veteran revolutionary who was jailed for several
times during the Shah's reign, Rafsanjani was appointed as member of the
Revolutionary Committee, the Interior Minister and the Majlis Speaker.
The 71-year-old powerful politician, currently
heading the Expediency Council, is seen as a figure who favors improving ties
with the West and liberalizing the Islamic republic's stagnant economy.
During the campaign, Rafsanjani put forward the
slogan of "Economic Democracy", holding that economic growth and freedoms are
prerequisites for social and political democracy.
It is widely purported that Rafsanjani is very
wealthy and rumors also spread about the corruptions of his family members' and
disciples, which he denied categorically.
Ahmadinejad, on the other hand, tells a quite
different story.
Born into a blacksmith family, Ahmadinejad is
supported mostly by the poor in the country and many citizens in Tehran, which
he has governed for 2 years.
The 49-year mayor is a former special forces officer
of the hardline Revolutionary Guards. It is also said that he used to work as a
secret agent for a while during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, which he denied
categorically.
Ahmadinejad's positive reputation came from his
merits of improving the traffic condition and stabilizing prices in Tehran
during his term.
However, he is viewed as a representative of the
ultra-conservatives of the country and a close disciple of Supreme Leader Seyed
Ali Khamenei, which has made him unpopular among less religious people in the
country. Enditem |