From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Sun Sep 01 2002 - 18:40:23 MDT
August 28, 2001 No.67 
    Iran After Khatami's Re-election: Caught Between the 
    Conservatives and the Reformists
Since Iranian President Mohammad Khatami was reelected on 
June 8 for a second term, the power struggle between reformists 
and conservatives has intensified. Currently, the struggle centers 
mainly on: a] A multi-faceted conflict between the reformist 
parliament and the conservative judiciary headed by Ayatollah 
Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi; and b] A conflict between 
Khatami and both the parliament and the conservative 
establishment over the nominees for cabinet positions [although 
all Khatami's nominees were eventually approved] and the future 
of the reforms. 
I. The Struggle Between the Parliament and the Judiciary 
The Makeup of the "Guardians Council" 
Although Khatami won 77% of the vote, the constitution dictates 
that the country's control is in the hands of the conservative bodies 
subject to the authority of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who 
has absolute power over matters of state. 
Khamenei maintains his control through: a] The Expediency 
Council, headed by former Iranian President Ayatollah Ali 
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who is the supreme arbiter in 
disputes between government authorities [for example, the 
parliament and the judiciary]; and b] The Guardians Council, 
which is higher up in the governing hierarchy than the parliament, 
and which is authorized to determine whether legislation passed 
by the parliament is compatible with Islamic law [Shari'a]. 
[Indeed, the Council has, on more than one occasion, blocked 
reformist parliament legislation]. The council is comprised of 
twelve members “ six clerics appointed by Khamenei, and six 
jurists nominated by the judiciary but subject to parliamentary 
approval. 
The first major crisis occurred with Khatami's inauguration: 
According to the constitution, the ceremony could not be held 
without the presence of all members of the Guardians Council. 
But the reformist parliament had refused to approve the Guardians 
Council nominees proposed by judiciary head Shahroudi, as all 
the candidates were considered by the parliament to be 
conservatives.[1] Postponing the inauguration, Khamenei 
instructed the Expediency Council to urgently resolve the dispute. 
In a meeting attended by Rafsanjani, parliament Speaker Mehdi 
Karroubi, Guardians Council representatives, and Khatami 
himself, the Expediency Council decided to enforce a 
"parliamentary bypass mechanism," by which Shahroudi's 
nominees would again be presented to parliament for its approval, 
but if the absolute majority required by the constitution was not 
obtained in the first round, a second vote would be held and 
candidates would be chosen by a relative majority. 
Thus, in the second round of voting, two of the nominees were 
approved by a relative majority of just over sixty votes. Some 70% 
[166] of the MPs presented cast blank ballots in an organized 
protest,[2] accusing Shahroudi of "failure to cooperate with them" 
in approving the list.[3] 
Some MPs even walked out in protest during Shahroudi's speech 
given at the swearing-in ceremony. Deputy parliament Speaker 
Mohammad Reza Khatami, the President's brother, protested 
against the Expediency Council's bias in favor of the conservative 
judiciary, and said that the parliament "does not agree with the 
council's decision but has no other alternative."[4] Yet despite the 
reformists' show of power, the crisis was resolved within three 
days, after the conservatives twisted the reformists' collective arm. 
The reformist daily Iran News warned that if the disputes between 
parliament and the judiciary continued, intervention by the 
Expediency Council would become the norm, and the Council 
"was likely to replace parliament as the legislative body."[5] 
Prosecuting MPs 
Reformist MPs, among them women, have been prosecuted 
during the past year by the conservative judiciary for criticizing 
conservatives in parliamentary discussions. Fatemeh Haqiqat-
Joo, a prominent MP and a member of the women's lobby in 
the parliament, called for prosecuting the judiciary speaker for 
accusing parliament of "running an inquisition" during the 
election of jurists to the Guardian Council.[6] She was sentenced 
to 22 months imprisonment for offending Islam and the Guardian 
Council.[7] 
Closing down Reformist Newspapers Since April 2000, some 40 
reformist newspapers “ the mouthpieces for political circles and 
reformist MPs “ have been closed down by judiciary directive. 
Many reformist journalists have been arrested and jailed, accused 
of circulating "propaganda against the regime" or endangering 
state security.[8] Moreover, after "Journalists' Day" was marked in 
Iran, and just one day after Khatami's inauguration, the judiciary's 
Press Court shut down the prominent reformist paper Hambastegi 
[Solidarity] on charges of slandering Judiciary head Shahroudi.[9] 
The paper's owner, MP Ibrahim Bai-Salami, was subpoenaed 
several times by the conservatives, and 15 complaints against him 
were made by conservative individuals and institutions which are 
pending. The Iranian Islamic Participation Front [IIPF], the 
parliament's large reformist forum, claimed that "some members 
of the judiciary are planning to thwart the reforms."[10] Following 
Bai-Salami's acknowledgement that "insulting articles and 
mistakes" had indeed appeared unintentionally in his paper, the 
"temporary" closure order was lifted.[11] 
Students Protest Over the Acquittal of Police for 1999 Riots 
In July 1999, severe rioting spread throughout Iran after 
plainclothes police broke into the University of Tehran and 
attacked students protesting the closure of a reformist paper.[12] 
MPs harshly criticized the judiciary for dragging its feet in 
prosecuting the police. 
Finally the judiciary acquitted the police. Moreover, in early July 
of this year the court convicted the students and sentenced them to 
six months to one year prison calling them "hooligans."[13] A 
majority of 159 MPs submitted a petition to the judiciary head 
Shahroudi criticizing "the transformation of victims into the guilty 
party."[14] Student organizations severely criticized the judiciary, 
and complained that the laws of the state were being perverted so 
as to work against the reformist political movement. They claimed 
that the verdicts were "worse than the blows in the [university] 
dormitories¦ even [worse] than being killed."[15] 
II. The Composition of the Cabinet “ Khatami between 
Hammer and Anvil 
After his inauguration, the path was clear for Khatami to present 
his government. It was expected that Khatami would institute far-
reaching cabinet changes so as to implement the reforms to which 
he had ceremoniously committed himself before his base of 
support “ the students and the women. 
But Khatami, caught between the hammer - conservatives who 
effectively rule the country, and the anvil - the reformist 
parliament calling for reform and for the approval of the 
ministerial nominees, presented a government fundamentally 
similar to the previous one. 
The rightist ministers “ Defense Minister Shamakhani, who had 
run against Khatami in the presidential election; Justice Minister 
Shoushtari; Foreign Minister Kharrazi; Intelligence Minister 
Younesi; and Interior Minister Moussavi-Lari, kept their seats 
despite the reformists' demands in parliament to oust them. Most 
of Khatami's changes concern the interior portfolios. Furthermore, 
in Khatami's government, women, students, and the working 
classes have no representation whatsoever, although they 
constitute most of Khatami's base of power. 
Both the reformist and the conservative press are sharply critical 
of Khatami's timidity in his ministerial nominations, particularly 
in light of the country's dire economic straits. Not only were there 
only five new ministerial nominees, but the nominees to economic 
posts were not sufficiently qualified or experienced.[16] 
Despite threats by both conservative and reformist MPs, all of 
Khatami's cabinet nominees were finally approved by the 
parliament. 
*Ayelet Savyon is Director of the Iranian Media Project. 
[1] IRNA, July 18, 2001. 
[2] Iran News, August 8, 2001. 
[3] IRNA, August 9, 2001. 
[4] IRNA, August 7, 2001. 
[5] Iran News, August 6, 2001. 
[6] Iran Daily, August 9, 2001; Aftab-e Yazd, August 8 2001. 
[7] IRNA, August 20, 2001. 
[8] Iran News, August 9, 2001. 
[9] The Judiciary closed down the paper after it published MP 
Rasoul Mehrparvar's harsh criticism of Shahroudi and the 
Judiciary. 
[10] IRNA, August 9, 2001. 
[11] IRNA, August 20, 2001. 
[12] IRNA, July 7, 2001. 
[13] IRNA, July 9, 2001. 
[14] IRNA, July 18, 2001. 
[15] IRNA, August 2, 2001. 
[16] Iran News, August 13, 2001; Tehran Times, August 13, 2001.
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