Yahoo – AFP,
Arthur MacMillan, 1 March 2016
Tehran (AFP) - With elections having eliminated politicians that opposed his historic nuclear deal, President Hassan Rouhani will now seek to transform Iran's economy and secure another term in office next year.
Tehran (AFP) - With elections having eliminated politicians that opposed his historic nuclear deal, President Hassan Rouhani will now seek to transform Iran's economy and secure another term in office next year.
The
67-year-old cleric, elected in 2013, should find the going easier, analysts
say, after voters elected a more moderate parliament likely to be more willing
than its predecessor to work with the government.
Rouhani
signalled Tuesday he immediately aims to bring economic reform in Iran,
starting with privatisation of the auto sector, a major industry that in recent
years struggled, producing cars that many see as too expensive, environmentally
inefficient and, worst of all, unsafe.
![]() |
President
Hassan Rouhani will seek to
transform Iran's economy and secure
another term in
office next year (AFP
Photo/Lionel Bonaventure)
|
"The
fact that we set up one or two companies and say 'this is it, take it or leave
it'. The government will not support such a logic."
With almost
80 million people, foreign companies have since last July's nuclear deal
between Tehran and six world powers looked to Iran as a long unserved market
with its young population an untapped source of potential major growth.
However,
the biggest contract since sanctions were lifted under the landmark agreement
has gone the other way, with Iran buying 118 Airbus passenger planes in a
$25-billion purchase.
Rouhani has
also faced domestic pressure to prevent foreign and particularly US companies
from using their economic influence to "infiltrate" Iran and
undermine the Islamic republic's political system.
![]() |
Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani visits
an automobile industry show in Tehran
(AFP
Photo)
|
However,
Amir Mohebbian, a Tehran-based political analyst with close ties to Iran's
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, said there is no major disagreement on
the need to reform the economy.
The only
tension is over how changes will be managed. Rouhani guided Iran out of
recession last year but growth has since stagnated.
"We
want to import the industries and technology, not the products," Mohebbian
said.
"Because
if it's just the products then there will be no employment for our people and
money will simply fly out of the country. And that is what some officials have
spoken up about."
Rouhani and
his cabinet ministers have said foreign money will benefit the nation's youth
-- whose unemployment rate at 25 percent is two-and-a-half times the national
average -- by creating jobs.
"It's
going to be 'economy, economy'," Ellie Geranmayeh, an Iran specialist at
the European Council on Foreign Relations said of the president's priorities
ahead of his re-election bid in June 2017.
![]() |
Iran's
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei votes in Tehran on February 26,
2016 (AFP
Photo)
|
"He
will push for reintegration into the international economic platform,
particularly with European investment in Iran's energy market," Geranmayeh
added of Rouhani.
Predecessors hit problems
But it
won't be a free for all. With the return of pro-Rouhani reformist politicians
when Iran's new parliament convenes in May, the president will have to balance
competing demands.
While
supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei backed Rouhani on the nuclear deal and
wants a better economy he has been cautious about foreign involvement and will
hold the president to account.
On the opposite side of Iranian politics, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Khatami's hardline successor, also clashed with Khamenei.
Naming Khamenei and Iran's most powerful military force, the Revolutionary Guards, Geranmayeh said: "Rouhani will want to maintain his existing positive relations with other power centres and avoid radical steps that led to his predecessors being sidelined."
Despite overwhelming public support, Iran's only reformist president Mohammad Khatami's 1997-2005 tenure was crippled by crises and disputes with the Guards and other influential bodies, such as The Guardian Council, who blocked his legislative efforts after they had been passed by MPs.
Despite overwhelming public support, Iran's only reformist president Mohammad Khatami's 1997-2005 tenure was crippled by crises and disputes with the Guards and other influential bodies, such as The Guardian Council, who blocked his legislative efforts after they had been passed by MPs.
![]() |
President
Hassan Rouhani has signalled he immediately aims to bring
economic reform in
Iran (AFP Photo/Atta Kenare)
|
On the opposite side of Iranian politics, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Khatami's hardline successor, also clashed with Khamenei.
But
Francois Nicoullaud, a political analyst and France's ambassador to Iran
between 2001 and 2005, said economic development should not prove a problem
"unless the guide (Khamenei) throws a spoke in the wheels".
In
contrast, "the most sensitive issue will be bringing about an opening on
social and cultural issues or human rights," matters close to the
reformist camp, Nicoullaud added.
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