Iran election fever is high
2005-06-15 11:01
Tehran - Campaigning for Iran's presidency entered its final phase on Wednesday with reformers and hardliners alike pulling out all stops to push frontrunner Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani into an unprecedented second round.
Informal opinion polls show the former president, once considered a racing certainty to sweep home in Friday's vote, is facing a twin challenge from hardliner Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf and reformer Mostafa Moin.
Increasing indications suggest that none of the eight candidates will poll the 50% needed to win outright, pushing the vote into an even more unpredictable second round run-off, the first in the history of the Islamic republic.
However the unscientific nature of the polls makes the outcome of Friday's vote impossible to call and a surprise similar to outgoing President Mohammad Khatami's shock 1997 landslide win cannot be ruled out.
Supporters of Moin have been expressing confidence that their man could spring such a surprise, despite calls from some liberals to boycott the vote and the disappointment over the unfulfilled promises of Khatami's difficult presidency.
Appealing to the youth
"If we have two more weeks, without any doubt, Moin can win the elections. Moin will be for sure in the second round. It's possible he can win in the first round," said Mohammad Reza Khatami, brother of the current president and leading reformist.
Qalibaf, a former hardline police chief who has swapped uniform for a suit and a smile, has been making efforts to increase his appeal and is also expressing confidence of a strong result.
The predicted also-rans in the race are hardliners Mohsen Rezai, Tehran mayor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and former state television boss Ali Larijani, and reformists Mohsen Mehr-Alizadeh and Mehdi Karoubi.
With less than 24 hours of allowed campaigning time remaining, activists were hard at work in Tehran pasting up posters of their candidates in what has been arguably the most vibrant election in the history of the Islamic Republic.
Seeking to present a human and caring face to the electorate, Rafsanjani broadcast an election film in which the cleric was seen having his well-kept silver hair cut at the barbers, watching football and taking off his turban.
Even the most conservative candidates have gone out of their way to court Iran's increasingly youthful population with a combination of slick marketing and a conspicuous avoidance of heavy-duty ideology.
There has been an unprecedented cut-and-thrust in the political debate, with crucial issues like renewing relations with the United States and personal liberties debated openly and not swept under the carpet.
Also new has been the large amount of funding flowing into candidates' campaign coffers - criticised in some quarters as un-Islamic - allowing them to put up posters all over the country and staging large-scale election rallies.
- AFP