Yahoo – AFP,
9 February 2016
Prominent but as yet unnamed reformists are among more than 1,400 initially rejected candidates now eligible to contest Iran's parliamentary elections on February 26, a government official said Tuesday.
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| Iran's Interior Ministry, which will supervise the ballot, said efforts by President Hassan Rouhani's government led to previously barred reformists, moderates and conservatives being approved |
Prominent but as yet unnamed reformists are among more than 1,400 initially rejected candidates now eligible to contest Iran's parliamentary elections on February 26, a government official said Tuesday.
The new
approvals raise the potential for a change in the balance of power in Iran's
parliament, a prospect that looked impossible after thousands of contenders
were barred in a first round of vetting.
Anyone
seeking to become one of Iran's 290 MPs must satisfy the Guardian Council, a
conservative-dominated constitutional watchdog of clerics and jurists, of their
suitability for public office.
No names of
the new approvals have yet been officially released but a final list is
expected on February 16.
Parliament
is now dominated by conservatives, and a reformist official said that last
month's exclusions had left only one percent -- 30 of the group's 3,000
candidates -- eligible for the election.
Iran's
Interior Ministry, which will supervise the ballot, said efforts by President
Hassan Rouhani's government led to previously barred reformists, moderates and
conservatives being approved.
The number
of people allowed to contest the parliamentary election now stands at 6,185 --
51 percent of original applicants -- including 586 women.
"The
fact that the Guardian Council added over 1,400 to the approved list shows the
efficiency of the government's follow-ups and consultations," ministry
spokesman Hossein Ali Amiri told reporters in Tehran.
"Reformists,
moderates, and conservatives are among the newly approved," he said.
"There
are prominent figures from the reformist and conservative camps."
On hearing
of last month's rejections, reformists asked Rouhani, a moderate cleric with
close ties to the reform movement, to intervene and seek changes.
Rouhani is
hoping his allies can capitalise in the elections after last month's
implementation of Iran's nuclear deal with world powers lifted longstanding
sanctions, paving the way for a better economy.
Reformists,
however, have been on the margins of parliament ever since they largely
boycotted legislative polls four years ago.
They stayed
away in protest after a disputed presidential election in 2009 had returned
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power.
The
reformist leaders in that vote -- Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi --
alleged that the election was rigged. They have been held under house arrest
since 2011.
The
February 26 parliamentary ballot coincides with elections to Iran's highest
clerical body, the Assembly of Experts, a powerful committee that monitors the
work of the country's supreme leader.
Voters will
elect 88 members to the assembly.
The Assembly
election is seen by many as more important than the parliamentary polls as its
members will be elected for eight years and they could select the next supreme
leader if the incumbent, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who is 76, dies during that
time.

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