Automatically translated from Basque, translation may contain errors. More information here. Elhuyarren itzultzaile automatikoaren logoa

Victory of a reformist in Iran, in full geopolitical stress


11 July 2024 - 11:28
Masoud Pezeshkian erreformistak irabazi ditu Irango hauteskunde presidentzialak, uztailaren 5eko bigarren itzulian.

The Iranian people were called on on 28 June last to vote to elect their new president, at a particularly difficult time at geopolitical level, for the genocide against the Palestinian people of the Israeli Government and the role that countries such as Iran play in that network. These unexpected elections, scheduled for 2025, have been brought forward due to the recent death of Ebrahim Raisi, president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo of Africa. The ultra-conservative Raisi died in a helicopter accident on 19 May, in a situation still to be determined. Raisi, considered a yes man [who does what they command] in much of the Iranian people, was the favorite for the succession of Ali Khamenak Aiatola. Ali Khamenak Aiatola has been the supreme leader of Iran since 1989 and the most powerful of all levels of political, judicial, military and national security power.

Finally, six representatives have been able to follow the electoral process. Two of them agreed to reverse. Alireza Zakani, mayor of the capital Tehran and Amir-Hossein Ghazizadeh Hashemi, government official. Two other candidates did not obtain sufficient votes: Conservative parliamentarian Mohammad Bagher Ghalibafe (3.38 million votes) and Islamic leader Mostafa Pourmohammadi (206,397 votes) were elected by an absolute majority. The majority of the votes were for two candidates: The ultra-conservative Saeed Khalili (EUR 9.47 million) and the reformist Masoud Pezeshkian (EUR 10.41 million) are the main drivers of the project. Candidates Ghalibaf, Zakani and Ghazizadeh have called the ultra-conservative candidate to support the triumph of the "revolutionary front", which faces Dumoulin and Sarkozy.

The Iranians are burned, but they do not lose hope and demonstrate this by not participating in the elections on 28 June in an act of civil disobedience

Only 39.9% of Iranians went to the ballot box on 28 June, which prompted a second ballot scheduled for 5 July. This apathy to the people’s elections, that of the youngest, above all, must be read as a general discontent towards their government, accentuated since 2022 by retaliation for the Women, Life, Freedom movement. It is also a mistrust towards a system of government which has reduced the power of the president and which, therefore, takes power away from his people. The Iranians are burned, but they have not lost hope and that is what they demonstrated on 28 June by not participating in an act of civil disobedience in the elections. This small turnout is nothing new. In the past presidential elections only 48.8% of the population voted, and in the last parliamentary elections in March and May only 41.1%, the lowest percentage since the Iranian Revolution in 1979.

The second and final round of the elections was held last Friday, 5 July, with the candidature of the ultra-conservative Khalili and the reformist Pezeshkian. Pezeshkian imposed, with 53.7% of the votes, on a candidate that the Western powers value with very good eyes. The Iranian people voted to pledge improvements in the area of civil liberties, more specifically with regard to gender equality, social justice and economic negotiations, the lifting of penalties and the fall in inflation. Although low, the turnout on 5 July was 10 points higher than on 28 June and stood at 50%. Although the main power is in the hands of the supreme leader, the president is the second: he has decision-making power in the national political and economic spheres, but also in foreign policy. It is not the same, therefore, for an Iranian president to be ultra-conservative and reformist. It remains to be seen how these elections will affect the current geopolitical landscape. For the Iranian people, the results are encouraging.


You are interested in the channel: Iran
2024-08-14 | Mikel Aramendi
Israel, Iran and the two elephants
The unusual size of the Hamas attack, and the lack of response from the Israeli War Cabinet, have to do directly with the depth of the geopolitical consequences. The genocide has led to changes in the Middle East and international alliances: What has Israel gained and lost? Has... [+]

The real reason for Israel to kill the leaders of Hamas and Hezbollah
Israel’s aim of murdering the leaders of Hamas and Hezbollah is not to weaken the resistance. The intention is to restore the image of its superiority in terms of intelligence and military to Israeli public opinion.

Hamas political leader murdered in Iran and Israel continues to feed regional war
Hamas, Iran and other agents have accused Israel of committing the attack, although at the moment it has not acknowledged the authorship of the attack on Gaza. In addition, Israel has murdered a major leader of Hezbollah on Wednesday in Beirut, and on Thursday the Israeli Army... [+]

Iran protests for the death sentence of Kurdish trade unionist Sharifeh Mohammadi
Sharifeh Mohammadi, an activist for workers' rights, has been sentenced to death after being convicted. The activist was arrested on 5 December 2023 on charges of a crime of sexual rebellion.

Weakened Israel and Iran with power

Over the past decade, France, the United Kingdom and the United States invaded Syria by breaking international law. In 2024, Washington still has a dozen military bases to occupy Syria and steals much of the country’s oil. Israel occupies the territories of Syria and... [+]


2024-04-15 | Axier Lopez
Iran’s attack on Israel
More war, more hypocrisy

Four Kurdish political prisoners are sentenced to death in Iran for "collaborating with Israel"
The Komala party rejects the indictment of the Iranian Government and claims that it is an attempt to “suppress and silence” the demonstrators.

Roasted turtle to eat

In the cave of Ghar-e Boof, south of the Zagros range in Iran, there have been no bones of hominids, but there have been animals eaten by them some 80,000 years ago, namely 941.

The study of these bones allowed us to know the diet of the time. The Scientific Report magazine has... [+]


Iranian journalists who announced the death of Mahsa Amini are sentenced to prison
Journalists Niloofar Hamedi and Elaheh Mohamadi will serve six- and seven-year prison sentences on charges of collaborating with the US Government, conspiring to commit security crimes and spreading prosecutions against the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Six new countries in an alliance of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa
The last summit of the alliance of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa in Johannesburg has focused on the adoption of new participants. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Egypt, Argentina and Ethiopia have been invited.

They hack Iranian public television to claim women's rights
On Saturday night, the Aedalat-e Ali group released a video in the midst of the public television live news programme. In addition to taking Chief Ali Khamenak out of the flames, there were messages like "women, life and freedom." Since the Islamic police arrested and tortured... [+]

2022-12-05 | Sheida Besozzi
Citizen demonstrations in Iran:
Women, life and freedom

We entered the twelfth week of the longest protests in Iran since the Islamic Revolution of 1979. The origin of the demonstrations was the death of Mahsa (Jina) Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian girl, who was arrested by the moral police for a bad way of bringing the dead... [+]


No, Alfred airport
When he died of a heart attack last Saturday, Mehran Karimi Nasseri was 76 years old. Eighteen of them were inaccessible from Charles de Gaulle Parisian airport. If we buy it for sale, the story is Kafkaesque.

2022-11-09 | Lide Iraola
Viral videos of multiple protests in Iran
Throwing out the clergy exploding games, street dances or fences between women and men
Since the Iranian police killed Mahsa Amini in September, citizen protests have increased both on the streets and on the networks. They have also responded with humor to the persecution of the State, initiating a movement of the clergy.

Eguneraketa berriak daude