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Monday, October 22, 2012


Ahmadinejad's influence in Iran wanes as term winds down

Judiciary blocks president's request to visit Tehran prison where political ally is held



Image: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
Vahid Salemi  /  AP, file
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, pictured here on Oct. 2, was denied a request to visit Tehran's Evin prison by the country's judiciary on Thursday.
updated 10/22/2012 10:00:06 AM ET



DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iran's judiciary has blocked a request by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to visit Tehran's Evin prison, where a top presidential aide is being held, the latest sign that his influence is waning in his last year in office.

Ali Akbar Javanfekr, Ahmadinejad's press adviser and head of the state news agency IRNA, was sent to Evin in September to serve a six-month sentence for publishing an article deemed offensive to public decency.

He was also convicted of insulting Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on his personal website, though it is unclear how or when this happened.

Ahmadinejad's request to visit Evin, made public this month, was seen by Iranian media and commentators as linked to Javanfekr's detention, although there has been no official confirmation that this was the case.

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'Major issues'
The judiciary rejected the request on Sunday, saying it was not in Iran's best interests as it faces an economic crisis. Ahmadinejad's opponents in parliament blame the crisis as much on mismanagement by his administration as on Western sanctions.

"We must pay attention to major issues," prosecutor general Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei said Sunday, according to the Mehr news agency. "Visiting a prison in these circumstances is a minor issue."

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"If we have in mind the best interests of the nation, a (prison) visit in these circumstances is not appropriate," he said.

Ahmadinejad's influence within the factionalized political structure has waned since a clash with Khamenei in 2011.


Video: Iran’s economy collapsing (on this page)


The feud between Iran's elected and unelected leaders erupted in public after Khamenei, who holds ultimate power, reinstated Intelligence Minister Heydar Moslehi, whom Ahmadinejad had sacked.

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On Monday, Khamenei's representative to the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps was quoted as saying that he regretted his past support for the president.

"We did not have the prescience to know what was going on in Mr. Ahmadinejad's mind and what he wanted to do in the future," Ali Saeedi Shahroudi told the Etemaad newspaper. "The slogans he uses now are different from the slogans he used in the past."

Ahmadinejad is coming to the end of his second term and is not allowed to run in the June 2013 presidential election.



Video: Iran’s economy collapsing



 

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