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Ahmadinejad dismisses top vice president

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  • Ahmadinejad dismisses top vice president

    Ahmadinejad dismisses top vice president
    25.07.2009 12:31 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Iran's supreme leader handed a humiliation to the
    president, ordering him to dismiss his choice for top deputy after the
    appointment drew sharp condemnation from their hard-line base.
    The move by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei appeared to show his
    need to keep hard-liners' support even at the cost of angering the
    president, a close ally - at a time when Khamenei is facing
    unprecedented opposition after the disputed June 12 election.
    President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's appointment for his top vice president
    sparked a rare split within the hard-line camp to which he belongs. A
    chorus of ultra-conservative clerics and politicians denounced his
    choice, Esfandiar Rahim Mashai, while Ahmadinejad had strongly
    defended the appointment.
    Mashai is a relative by marriage to Ahmadinejad - his daughter is
    married to the president's son. Mashai angered hard-liners in 2008
    when he said Iranians were "friends of all people in the world - even
    Israelis." He was serving as vice president in charge of tourism and
    cultural heritage at the time. Iran has 12 vice presidents, but the
    first vice president is the most important because he leads Cabinet
    meetings in the absence of the president.
    After days of controversy, Khamenei ruled. "The view of the exalted
    leader on the removal of Mashai from the post of vice president has
    been notified to Ahmadinejad in writing," the semiofficial Fars news
    agency reported Wednesday.
    It was an unusually overt show of authority by Khamenei, who has the
    ultimate say in state affairs in Iran. The supreme leader is believed
    to often weigh in on senior government appointments behind the scenes,
    but it is rare for him to openly order an official's removal.
    In the election dispute, Khamenei strongly supported the president,
    who is seen as his protege, declaring valid the results that showed
    Ahmadinejad's re-election. Opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi
    claims he won the election and Ahmadinejad's victory is fraudulent,
    and hundreds of thousands of supporters marched in the street in the
    weeks after the election.
    A fierce crackdown suppressed the massive street protests. But the
    opposition continues to press its claims that Ahmadinejad's government
    is illegitimate. More importantly, the clerical leadership that
    Khamenei in theory leads has been split, with many moderate clerics
    angered by the handling of the election crisis or outright supportive
    of Mousavi. That has made Khamenei more reliant on hard-line clerics
    for support. It was not immediately clear if Ahmadinejad would cave in
    to Khamenei's order.
    Ali Akbar Javanfekr, top media adviser to Ahmadinejad, said on Tuesday
    that the president won't change his mind over the controversy. But it
    was unclear if his comments came before or after the supreme leader's
    order.
    "The president makes his decisions ... within the framework of his
    legal powers and on the basis of investigations carried
    out. Experience has proved that creating baseless controversies won't
    influence the president's decision," Javanfekr said in his blog.
    Nearly the same time as Khamenei was issuing his order late Tuesday,
    Ahmadinejad vowed to keep Mashai.
    "Mr. Mashai is a supporter of the position of the supreme leader and a
    pious, caring, honest and creative caretaker for Iran ... Why should
    he resign?" the official IRNA news agency quoted Ahmadinejad as
    saying. "Mashai has been appointed as first vice president and
    continues his activities in the government."
    The deputy speaker of the parliament, Mohammad Hasan Aboutorabi-Fard,
    meanwhile, said that Mashai's dismissal was a decision by the ruling
    system itself, according to the semiofficial ISNA news.
    "Removing Mashai from key posts and the position of vice president is
    a strategic decision of the system ... Dismissal or resignation of
    Mashai needs to be announced by the president without any delay," IRNA
    quoted him as saying late Tuesday.
    Iran's state television didn't report Ahmadinejad's comments
    supporting his deputy. A conservative Web site said TV officials had
    orders from higher officials not to do so.
    Mashai also angered many of Iran's top clerics in 2007 when he
    attended a ceremony in Turkey where women performed a traditional
    dance. Conservative interpretations of Islam prohibit women from
    dancing.
    He ran into trouble again in 2008 when he hosted a ceremony in Tehran
    in which several women played tambourines and another one carried the
    Quran to a podium to recite verses from the Muslim holy book, AFP
    reported.
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