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Rafsanjani Jailings Come Against Backdrop Of Battle For Influence


Former President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani (second from right) stands next to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (center) at the opening session of the Nonaligned Movement summit in Tehran in August.
Former President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani (second from right) stands next to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (center) at the opening session of the Nonaligned Movement summit in Tehran in August.
Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, once one of Iran’s most influential men, now has two children in Tehran’s Evin prison -- where opposition activists and critics of the Islamic establishment are routinely held.

The arrests are just the latest blow to the former president, who has long come under fire from hard-liners over his support for the opposition movement that challenged the reelection in 2009 of President Mahmud Ahmadinejad.

In the past four years the pragmatic Rafsanjani -- whose star began to fade after his defeat at the hands of Ahmadinejad in the 2005 presidential election -- has been banned from leading Tehran’s Friday Prayers, lost his role as the head of the Assembly of Experts, and been openly attacked at public events.

The jailing of his son and daughter (he has five children in all) marks an escalation of pressure and comes as he appeared poised to regain some prominence.

Rafsanjani’s daughter, former Iranian lawmaker Faezeh Hashemi, was detained late on September 22 and made to begin serving a six-month jail sentence she was given in January when she was convicted of antistate propaganda and insulting Iran’s leaders following the crackdown on election protesters.

Hashemi had spoken out against Ahmadinejad’s reelection and criticized the postelection repression.

Her arrest over the weekend was seen as a warning to Rafsanjani and his son, Mehdi Hashemi, who was already planning to return to Iran after a three-year stay abroad.

Rafsanjani’s other daughter, Fatemeh Rafsanjani, told the opposition Kalameh website that the head of the judiciary and other officials told Hashemi Rafsanjani that his son should return to Iran.

“It’s been three years that they say [Mehdi Hashemi] should return and be held responsible," she said. "Well, Mehdi is done with his studies and work and he’s back. He doesn’t have a problem with answering your questions. Their hullabaloo was aimed at scaring Mehdi and preventing him from returning. They sent Faezeh to prison to scare him.”

Nevertheless, one day after his sister was jailed, Mehdi Hashemi -- who had been also charged with antistate propaganda and corruption -- returned to Iran. On September 24, as expected, he ended up in jail after being summoned and questioned by prosecutors.

Washington-based political analyst Ali Afshari believes the events signal that radicals within the Iranian establishment are determined to clip Rafsanjani’s wings even further.

“Ahead of the 2013 presidential vote, hard-liners are trying to neutralize Rafsanjani’s moves and prevent the political atmosphere from opening up," Afshari says.

“Hard-liners also appear [to be preparing] for a final showdown with Rafsanjani, [to force] his complete elimination from Iran’s political scene," Afshari says. "Here, the radical wing of the establishment is motivated more than [Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei]. They believe that for them to be fully in charge in post-Khamenei [Iran] they need to get rid of Rafsanjani.”

During a recent Nonaligned Movement (NAM) summit hosted by Iran, Rafsanjani made a high-profile appearance next to Khamenei, leading to speculation that he was being rehabilitated at a time when Iran faces unprecedented international pressure. Days after the summit, the former president called publicly for “free and transparent” elections as a solution to much of the country’s problems and warned that Iran was facing a critical situation.

Those comments were too much for Iran’s powerful hard-liners to take, says New York-based Iranian journalist Roozbeh Mirebrahimi.

“The [NAM] event was a show to bring Rafsanjani closer to the [hard-liners], but his stances after that were not something that hard-liners approve of -- therefore things went back to square one," Mirebrahimi says. "Rafsanjani has called for free elections, which means that currently they’re not [free]. He also said that the political atmosphere should be opened up for Iran to find a way out of the current situation. That wasn’t something the radical figures could digest.”

Rafsanjani has not publicly commented on the arrest of his son and daughter. A video released on Iranian news websites -- which can be seen here -- shows him saying farewell to his son Mehdi on September 24, shortly before the younger Rafsanjani turned himself in to authorities. Rafsanjani is seen hugging him and reciting a prayer for travelers.

Rafsanjani, considered a pillar of Iran's Islamic Revolution, is nicknamed “the Shark” because of his lack of a beard but also because of his perceived political shrewdness. Many people will be watching closely to see what he does next.


-- Golnaz Esfandiari, with contributions from Radio Farda broadcaster Alireza Kermani

About This Blog

Persian Letters is a blog that offers a window into Iranian politics and society. Written primarily by Golnaz Esfandiari, Persian Letters brings you under-reported stories, insight and analysis, as well as guest Iranian bloggers -- from clerics, anarchists, feminists, Basij members, to bus drivers.

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