An undated photo of Hassan Rouhani showing respect to Ali Khamenei.
Hassan Rouhani has accused the Khamenei-appointed Guardian Council of undermining democracy and diminishing the people's role in elections by vetoing candidates with disapproved political views.
“This is not a defense of myself, but the defense of the system's republican (and Islamic) foundations, a defense of the institution of presidency which as the direct representative of all Iranians should not be weakened any more than this,” the former president who was barred from running in the March 1 elections of Assembly of Experts has written in an open letter.
The Guardian Council comprises twelve members, half of whom are clerics with expertise in Sharia laws and appointed by the Supreme Leader. The remaining six members, who may be laymen or clerics versed in civil law, are appointees of the chief justice, who is also appointed by Khamenei. They require parliamentary approval and over the years have expanded their role in disqualifying election candidates.
Opponents of the clerical regime and dissidents have always been barred from running in the elections, but now prominent insiders are being disqualified. Hundreds of candidates running for parliament and the Council were disqualified this year. The pattern was that those who are not members of hardliner factions or have been tossed out of Khamenei’s inner circle were barred.
Centenarian Ahmad Jannati, head of the Guardian Council
Rouhani has been challenging the decision since February without any result. He said in his open letter that he has not received a satisfactory response form the Council. The reasons cited so far do not constitute legal violations on his part to warrant disqualification.
Rouhani said the “classified letter” he received from the Council’s Secretary, Ahmad Jannati, amounted to “an indictment” not only against him and his government but also against “the institution of presidency” and refuted all the reasons cited, namely insolence against the Judiciary and the Council itself, “lack of political insight”, failing to comply with the Constitution, and “contradicting pure Islamic beliefs.”
The contents of Jannati’s letter prove that the president who is the “highest directly-elected official” of the country does not have the right to freedom of speech even as much as an ordinary citizen and his statements about other institutions of the country, including the Guardian Council, Judiciary, and the Parliament can always be turned into an indictment against him, Rouhani argued.
“The Council uses my presidential record as the legal as reasons for not having been convinced of my qualification to run, as if the second highest official of the country is an opposition figure,” Rouhani said while pointing out that the Council itself had twice before found him qualified to run for the presidency and three times to run in the elections of the Assembly of Experts.
He also pointed out that he had served as the secretary and chairman of the Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) for 24 years and represented Khamenei in the National Security Council the whole time.
The Guardian Council, originally empowered to interpret the Constitution, review legislation, and supervise elections, bestowed upon itself discretionary supervisory powers in 1991, giving it the final say on candidate eligibility. Over the past two decades, it has used these powers to eliminate various political factions, targeting reformists, moderates, and even some conservatives.
The pattern of candidate disqualification has turned into a serious concern about the transparency and fairness of Iran's electoral process for over a decade resulting in continuous decline of election turnout in the past few years.
The Council, however, always cites other reasons for disqualifying candidates or argues that it could not “confirm the candidate’s qualifications” due to lack of sufficient evidence. Religious jurisprudence (ijtihad), required for running in elections of the Assembly of Experts, for instance, has often been cited for disqualification of candidates in its elections.
Larijani, for instance, repeatedly called on the Council to publicly announce the reason he was barred but was told it would not be “in his interest” if they did so.
Kioumars Heydari, the commander of Iran's army ground forces, has once again warned Israel against military action amid the ongoing shadow war between the two nations.
According to the Tasnim News Agency, closely linked with the Revolutionary Guards, Heydari declared, "If a threat against us originates from the Zionist regime, it will be responded to from the Islamic Republic."
In a detailed account of military actions, Heydari highlighted the April 13 operation where Iran launched hundreds of projectiles at Israel, though nearly all were intercepted by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) and a US-backed coalition.
In the latest state propaganda against Israel lauding the attack, he claimed that this operation “advanced the prospect of Israel's destruction”, rhetoric repeated for many years as Iran has waged a proxy war against the Jewish state, funding terror groups across Israel’s borders.
The ongoing tension between Iran and Israel is marked by a series of alleged cyber-attacks, assassinations of key figures, and missile strikes, reflecting a deep-rooted shadow war going back years.
It is speculated that Israel carried out two major acts of sabotage in 2020 and 2021 targeting Iran’s substantial nuclear facility in Natanz, situated in the heart of the country.
Most recently Iran has been at the heart of the Middle East conflict which saw Iran-backed Hamas invade Israel on October 7. Since then Iran’s proxies have joined the war from countries including Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and Iraq, targeting both Israel and the US.
Four Nobel Peace Prize laureates condemned the escalating executions in Iran on Wednesday as numbers continue to soar.
The statement signed by Shirin Ebadi, Jody Williams, Tawakkol Karman and Leymah Gbowee, said Iran's regime is using capital punishment as a “political intimidation tool to spread fear, silence opposition and desperately hold on to power.”
They noted that “on average, one person a day is executed in Iran on trumped up drug-related or vague religious infringement charges.”
An average of one execution occurred every five hours over the course of two weeks, between April 16 and April 30, according to data presented by the Iran Human Rights organization (IHR).
Between January and April 2024, 171 people, including six women, were executed.
Since the Women, Life, Freedom protests broke out in 2022, during which over 550 protesters were killed, the Iranian government has increased the pace of executions significantly. In 2023 alone, the country saw at least 834 executions– more than half of which were carried out for drug-related offenses and disproportionately affected minorities such as Kurds.
Amnesty International called the drug-related offenses trials “grossly unfair”. “further entrenching discrimination against marginalized communities” as Iran continues to persecute the country’s minorities.
They also called on the UN Human Rights Council, the Special Rapporteur on Iran, and the investigative fact-finding mission "to prioritize the incorporation of a gender lens in their continuous efforts to accurately reflect the extent of gender persecution and gender apartheid in Iran."
Iran's Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi has defended the country’s morality police after a new video emerged of officers violently arresting a woman on the street.
Vahidi argued on Wednesday that the police acted correctly because the woman who was warned: “resisted and stripped herself.” “The officers have acted according to the regulations.”
In the video, the female agents try to drag a woman who does not seem to be wearing a headscarf into a van and are seen throwing a blanket over her as they bundle her into the vehicle.
In an attempt to force her into the police car, they pull her shirt off while she resists, yanking it off with force, in echoes of the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, arrested for not wearing her hijab properly and the trigger for the ongoing uprising.
On Wednesday, Mohsen Borhani, a professor of criminal law at Tehran University, wrote on X: “Whether unfortunate or fortunate, we are not blind. We can differentiate between "being undressed by yourself," "being undressed by someone else," and "being undressed during a conflict." Make the uncut film available for everyone to watch and judge. Also, legally, you cannot prevent people from filming.”
Tehran police on Thursday defected the blame, claiming the woman threw a "cup of hot coffee" at the officers, leading to her violent arrest and blanket smothering.
The police released a video along with their statement claiming that she confessed. The video shows that the woman refused to wear a headscarf even after being arrested.
On Thursday, Ex-MP Ahmad Alirezabeigi criticized the police, saying the “force's resources should be spent on issues that provide the greatest possibility for peace and comfort. In policy-making, the issue of hijab is given priority, not the public's demand. People suffer from economic problems such as inflation, high prices, unemployment, and the frustration of the young generation."
The incident is one in a long line as conditions for women worsen since last month’s new Noor regulations enforced tougher hijab crackdowns, surveillance and more police patrols.
Just days ago, a video surfaced on social media showing a regime's hijab enforcement police officer beating and violently arresting a woman. During the assault, a woman whose face is not visible says, "Let go of me... you've broken my neck."
In addition to 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, the violent crackdowns have seen the death of Armita Geravand, 16, who fell into a coma and later died after an altercation with hijab enforcers in the Tehran subway in October. Reports suggest a female agent pushed her, but details of the incident remain unclear as the regime continues to cover its responsibility.
Iran's crackdown on hijab and oppression of women was branded 'gender apartheid' by the UN, and women's rights groups continue to fight for their rights in a country where laws are being toughened against women and girls as the regime fights for its legitimacy.
The commander of Iran's Basij militias linked the wave of pro-Palestinian student protests across US universities to what he describes as an "Islamic awakening."
Addressing the media, Gholamreza Soleimani claimed that "the awakenings we are witnessing today in America, Canada, and Japan all originate from Islamic awakenings and are derived from the culture of Islamic resistance."
Soleimani's remarks followed comments from Ahmad Alamolhoda, a senior Iranian cleric and father-in-law to Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi, who attributed the mobilization of the student protests to the influence of letters from Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
This contrasts sharply with the Iranian regime's harsh treatment of domestic dissent, particularly among its own student activists, who face severe penalties for similar protest activities. The discrepancy has drawn criticism from within Iran, with many pointing out the regime’s apparent hypocrisy.
The Iranian leadership, including Khamenei, has portrayed the student protests as a victory for pro-Palestinian sentiments among Western youth, interpreting it as a sign of growing global sensitivity towards the Palestinian issue. The more the world aligns with Palestine, the greater the victory Tehran feels against its archenemy Israel.
Throughout his leadership, Khamenei has maintained a strong anti-Israel and anti-West stance, supporting groups like terror group Hamas. His policy has contributed to Iran's isolation from the global economy, exacerbating existing economic challenges such as a shrinking GDP and soaring inflation rates.
The leveraging of anti-Israeli and anti-Western sentiments on international stages is seen as part of Iran's strategy to assert the legitimacy and righteousness of its political stance in the face of domestic and international pressures.
Mowlavi Abdolhamid, Iran’s prominent Sunni leader from Zahedan, has reportedly traveled abroad for medical treatment.
His official Telegram channel did not disclose his destination but reassured followers of his good health.
Haalvash, a human rights organization that focuses on Sistan-Baluchestan, reported that Abdolhamid has traveled to Tehran on Wednesday before heading to Turkey for treatment.
There are some unverified reports that he is suffering from Parkinson’s disease.
The trip comes amidst a backdrop of increased scrutiny from Iranian authorities in f the outspoken cleric who has openly criticized the government’s persecution of the Sunni minority. In June, reports surfaced that the Ministry of Intelligence had banned him from making his pilgrimage to Hajj, citing ‘security concerns’.
The Sunni cleric, 77 has been a vocal critic of the Iranian regime, particularly following the violent events of September 30, 2022, in Zahedan, which saw nearly ahundred citizens killedby government forces amid the nationwide uprising dubbed Women, Life, Freedom.
The incident was the bloodiest during the nationwide uprising triggered by the death in morality-police custody of Mahsa Amini in 2022.
The cleric has boldly opposed the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s policies in the wake of the uprising which has seen thousands of protesters arrested on trumped up charges and multiple executions. He has demanded the repeal of execution and decrees against protesters.
His criticisms have put him in danger and drawn sharp rebuke from conservative elements within Iran, with Kayhan newspaper—a media outlet closely aligned with Khamenei—accusing him of serving the enemies of Islam.