World Watch
By

Leily Lankarani /

CNET/ February 9, 2009, 4:12 AM

Iran Ex-Leader To Challenge Ahmadinejad

(AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)
After months of speculation, former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami announced Monday that he will run again in June's presidential election.

"I will seriously take part as a candidate for the election," Khatami told an assembled crowd of pro-reform clerics.

Khatami, a reformist himself, led Iran from 1997-2005. After two terms in office, he was succeeded by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the hard-line conservative who clashed for four years with former President George W. Bush.

Khatami has faced tough opposition from conservatives, even before his official announcement.

During his eight years in power he was criticized by opponents for abandoning the fundamentals of the Islamic Republic, and by fellow reformists and students for not living up to his promises to bring reforms to the country.

Some of his supporters were disillusioned by his failure to deliver more change while he was in power.

Announcing his candidacy, Khatami asked rhetorically, "Is it possible to remain indifferent to the revolution's fate and shy away from running in the elections?" He has always vowed to adhere faithfully to Iran's Islamic principles and act according to the constitution.

Khatami stressed the need for free and fair elections, saying the fate of Islamic Revolution is at stake.

Mohammad Ali Abtahi, a close aide to Khatami, told CBS News that if voter participation is high they can easily win the elections. He said, however, that it would be a hard-fought race with the current president, who has the state-controlled media at his disposal.

Abtahi said he hoped that, "In spite of all the bad propaganda against Khatami, which has already started, the younger generation and those who wish for improvement in the future will do their best to guarantee Khatami's victory. The election day, this time, will be a turning point for the fate of the Iranian nation."

Among other candidates for the top office; Ayatollah Mehdi Karoubi, a former Speaker of the Parliament, has announced that he will run for the presidency, and a close aide to Iran's president has said Ahmadinejad will stand for a second term in the June balloting.

The most prominent name among likely candidates is former Prime Minister Hussein Mousavi.
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.
17 Comments Add a Comment
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nincomp says:
why doesn''''t this majority of Muyslims rise up against the cancer? Answer that! I guess like you it''''s easier to blame the defenders than stand up to the evil.
Posted by notblue at 11:20 AM : Feb 09, 2009
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It''s because of Egyptian army and police that Egyptians are not able to rise and stand up against Hosni Mubarak.
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tmittelstaed says:
"...overcome this corrupt fundamentalist version of Islam and fee themselves...."

Hey, at least they are only feeing THEMSELVES, GW Bush and Co. not only fee''d us, they put fees on our children too when they ran up the budget deficit.
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tmittelstaed says:
"...inh4, only one "religious grouop" trains children suicide bomb and martyre themselves in the name of Allah...."

notblue, only one "religious group" trains children to bomb and kill clinics and doctors who''s only crime is to help some women have a bit more control over their reproductive rights.

And one "religious group" trains children to ignore their siblings pain and suffering and allow them to die in pain because "doctors don''t work, only prayer cures people"

Follow what God you want, just keep Him out of government. As the Founding Fathers said, government FOR the people BY THE PEOPLE.
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yongamerica says:
BFD! The real ruler of Iran sits. Iran''s Theocracy is killing and torturing it''s own people. Who uses stoning as a capital punishment other that Iran these days? Okay, the Taliban.

Iran''s government uses family genocide and torture to maintain its control. The Iranian people need to unite and overcome this corrupt fundamentalist version of Islam and fee themselves.
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notblue says:
linh4, only one "religious grouop" trains children suicide bomb and martyre themselves in the name of Allah.
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lindh4 says:
Make no mistake, what the Iranians have now is what Christian fundamentalists want for the US. If this secular country can''t get rid of its religious crackpots, how do you expect the Iranians to dump theirs? The whole world is infested with these purveyors of mumbo jumbo.
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notblue says:
hungry while you slit hairs most inteligent clear thinking adults know that the evil called RADICAL ISLAM puts all your "groups" under one umbrella.
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notblue says:
hungry, it''s the 30% of radicals throughout the MUsdlim world that are creating all the chaos, why doesn''t this majority of Muyslims rise up against the cancer? Answer that! I guess like you it''s easier to blame the defenders than stand up to the evil.
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notblue says:
hungry,slightly over half the country "rejected conservatism". Now we will see waht progressive liberalism will do for America. The liberal you refer to in Iran is more conservative than a far right evangilical in America. Why is it you have no perspective? Stupidity of purposeful ignorance?
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notblue says:
Hungry, glorious Jihad, the destruction of the great Satan, Why blow yourself up as in a suicide bombing mission, why fly planes into buildings and die doing it? If you can answer any one of those questions you can answer your own. Geesh!
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