UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

DATE=2/17/2000
TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT
TITLE=IRAN ELECTIONS (L)
NUMBER=2-259272
BYLINE=SCOTT BOBB
DATELINE=CAIRO
CONTENT=
VOICED AT:
INTRO:  Voters in Iran are preparing to go to the 
polls Friday to choose a new parliament.  V-O-A 
Correspondent Scott Bobb in Tehran reports that most 
candidates are running as independents, but many of 
them have affiliated with coalitions.  And as a 
result, the election is shaping up as a contest 
between reformists and conservatives.
TEXT:  As election officials prepare to open polling 
stations across Iran, leaders of both the reformist 
and conservative alliances are predicting victory.
The leader of the reformist Participation Front and 
the president's brother, Mohammad Reza Khatami, called 
the campaign a victory for the people.
            ///  KHATAMI ACT  ///
      Whatever the result will be, many things that we 
      want happened.  And the result of the election 
      will be in favor of the reformers in Iran.
            ///  END ACT  ///
Candidate Khatami said the reform movement is 
advancing steadily, and he predicted 60-percent of the 
parliamentary seats will go to reformists and their 
allies.
However, leaders of the main conservative alliance, 
called the Followers of the Line of the Imam, 
predicted they will control the next parliament.
Spokesman Hassan Ghafourifad said the conservatives 
and their allies expect to win a majority.
///  GHAFOURIFAD ACT - IN FARSI - FADE UNDER  ///
Doctor Ghafourifad said he believes in voter loyalty 
to Iran's supreme leader and as a result the group 
will have a majority, like in the two previous 
parliaments.
Both the conservatives and the reformists include 
centrist candidates in their calculations.  Iranian 
observers say this indicates that the centrist 
coalition led by the Construction Party is likely to 
wield considerable influence in the next parliament 
and could become the main power broker.
            ///  REST OPT  ///
Many Iranians see signs in this election that a multi-
party political system may be emerging.  Parties were 
banned following the revolution, but in recent years a 
score of political groups have emerged and some have 
been registered as parties.
The editor-in-chief of the reformist Asr-e Azadegan 
newspaper, Hamidreza Jalei-pour, says many groups have 
joined forces in opposition to the conservative status 
quo, but this he says may change.
///  JALEI-POUR ACT  ///
      Little by little, we will have in the future 
      three poles of the political party(ies), left, 
      right, and center.
            ///  END ACT  ///
Iranians say in past elections, the political leanings 
of many politicians and their groups often were not 
clearly defined, leading to voter confusion.  And they 
say the similarity of the discourse of the candidates 
gave few alternatives and led to voter apathy.
However, they say this election has been different.  
Although the outcome is still  not  certain, they say 
the process has certainly evolved.  (Signed)
NEB/SB/JWH/LTD/gm
17-Feb-2000 12:18 PM EDT (17-Feb-2000 1718 UTC)
NNNN
Source: Voice of America
.





NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list