AHMADINEJAD REGIME PLOTS PURGE
/PanARMENIAN.Net/
29.06.2009 20:09 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Opponents of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian
president, are bracing themselves for a purge if, as expected,
he returns to office following the country's bitterly disputed
presidential election, The Times reports.
His defeated rival, Mir Hos-sein Mousavi, who came a distant second in
a poll he insists was rigged by the regime, has continued to defy what
he has called "huge pressures" to halt his campaign for a new vote.
Last week his communications with the outside world were severely
restricted, his web page was taken down and his newspaper was closed,
with 25 of its employees arrested.
Supporters said they feared Mousavi could become another Aung San
Suu Kyi, the Burmese pro-democracy leader who has spent 13 of the
past 19 years under house arrest.
Mousavi inspired hundreds of thousands of Iranians who poured onto
the streets to demand that the results of the June 12 election should
be annulled. Yesterday, however, the regime's brutal crackdown, which
has seen at least 17 demonstrators killed and about 3,000 detained,
appeared to be succeeding.
Observers said they believed that after his inauguration, due by
early August, a vengeful Ahmadinejad would oust anyone in government
who had favoured the opposition or simply failed to support him.
"There will be a purge, no doubt about it," said Ali Ansari, director
of the Iranian Institute of St Andrews University, who until recently
often travelled to Iran for research. "There are people in Tehran
who think, now that the regime has won, they will be left alone. I
can't tell you how far from the truth this is."
The purge may already have begun. Akbar Torkan, the deputy oil
minister and a rising star in the government, was sacked after writing
sympathetically in an opposition newspaper.
Iranian sources said 17 senior officers in the elite Revolutionary
Guard had been "reassigned" because their loyalties were suspect.
It is not a new tactic for Ahmadinejad. Since he became president
in 2004 he has replaced every ambassador and all but one of Iran's
provincial governors with cronies, as well as filling important
ministries with allies.
"I expect Ahmadinejad to continue the purge he started when he became
president," said Amir Taheri, an Iranian analyst. "He will go for the
parliament, the Guardian Council, where four members were against
him, and even the expediency council, which oversees the office of
supreme leader."
The analysts pointed out that Ahmadinejad was able to move because he
had the public backing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader.
/PanARMENIAN.Net/
29.06.2009 20:09 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Opponents of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian
president, are bracing themselves for a purge if, as expected,
he returns to office following the country's bitterly disputed
presidential election, The Times reports.
His defeated rival, Mir Hos-sein Mousavi, who came a distant second in
a poll he insists was rigged by the regime, has continued to defy what
he has called "huge pressures" to halt his campaign for a new vote.
Last week his communications with the outside world were severely
restricted, his web page was taken down and his newspaper was closed,
with 25 of its employees arrested.
Supporters said they feared Mousavi could become another Aung San
Suu Kyi, the Burmese pro-democracy leader who has spent 13 of the
past 19 years under house arrest.
Mousavi inspired hundreds of thousands of Iranians who poured onto
the streets to demand that the results of the June 12 election should
be annulled. Yesterday, however, the regime's brutal crackdown, which
has seen at least 17 demonstrators killed and about 3,000 detained,
appeared to be succeeding.
Observers said they believed that after his inauguration, due by
early August, a vengeful Ahmadinejad would oust anyone in government
who had favoured the opposition or simply failed to support him.
"There will be a purge, no doubt about it," said Ali Ansari, director
of the Iranian Institute of St Andrews University, who until recently
often travelled to Iran for research. "There are people in Tehran
who think, now that the regime has won, they will be left alone. I
can't tell you how far from the truth this is."
The purge may already have begun. Akbar Torkan, the deputy oil
minister and a rising star in the government, was sacked after writing
sympathetically in an opposition newspaper.
Iranian sources said 17 senior officers in the elite Revolutionary
Guard had been "reassigned" because their loyalties were suspect.
It is not a new tactic for Ahmadinejad. Since he became president
in 2004 he has replaced every ambassador and all but one of Iran's
provincial governors with cronies, as well as filling important
ministries with allies.
"I expect Ahmadinejad to continue the purge he started when he became
president," said Amir Taheri, an Iranian analyst. "He will go for the
parliament, the Guardian Council, where four members were against
him, and even the expediency council, which oversees the office of
supreme leader."
The analysts pointed out that Ahmadinejad was able to move because he
had the public backing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader.