Radio Zamaneh
  • Home
  • Advertise
  • About Zamaneh Media
    • Sponsors
    • Donate
    • Vacancies
    • Contact us
    • Legal
    • Republishing Guidelines
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Advertise
  • About Zamaneh Media
    • Sponsors
    • Donate
    • Vacancies
    • Contact us
    • Legal
    • Republishing Guidelines
No Result
View All Result
Radio Zamaneh
No Result
View All Result

Iranian reformists look at return to political arena

by Zamaneh Media
April 12, 2012
in Latest Articles
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0
Iranian reformists look at return to political arena
Mohammad Khatami

Iranian reformists say they are planning to muster their resources around former president Mohammad Khatami and run in the presidential elections next year.

Mohammadreza Khabbaz, a reformist MP and member of the National Trust Party, told the Mehr News Agency on Wednesday: “If Khatami is placed at the centre of this movement, we can rebuild ourselves for the next elections and compete in the 2013 elections with a minimum number of candidates.”

Khabbaz said: “Currently the best personality available to the reformist movement is Mohammad Khatami; therefore, if Khatami agrees, the reformists can repair themselves for the coming presidential elections.”

He commented on Khatami’s decision to vote in the parliamentary elections last month, saying: “Voting in the last elections opened a path for the re-entry of reformists into the political arena; therefore, with the help of the system, we can work toward mounting a serious competition in the next presidential election.”

The last presidential elections triggered mass protests and then a widespread crackdown on protesters, who claimed the government had rigged the elections in order to deny the victory of reformist candidate MirHosein Mousavi and give Mahmoud Ahmadinejad another term as president.

While the allegations of fraud in the elections were never followed up on, the reformists candidates continued to challenge the Ahmadinejad administration. Finally, in February of 2011, when they called for a mass demonstration in support of the Arab uprisings in the region, the reformist candidates were put under house arrest and remain there to this day.

In the meantime, the establishment accused the reformists of sedition, and many of their top figures were arrested and given long jail terms.

Mohammad Khatami, a chief reformist figure, has been calling for the release of all political prisoners, emphasizing that reformists, far from being seditious, are in fact supporters of the Islamic Republic system but concerned with reforming its shortcomings.

Many reformist groups boycotted the March parliamentary elections to protest the continued arrest of the opposition leaders and political prisoners, and also because they believe the elections could not be healthy and transparent under the current closed political atmosphere.

Mohammad Khatami drew fire from many reformist and opposition groups when, contrary to expectations, he voted in the elections, but the former president said that he had done so in order to “keep the reformist option on the table.”

Related Posts

Hormuz, Bab al-Mandab, and the New Age of Cheap Maritime War
Economy

Hormuz, Bab al-Mandab, and the New Age of Cheap Maritime War

June 11, 2026
Bab al-Mandab: How a Red Sea Chokepoint Can Shake Oil and Food Markets
Economy

Bab al-Mandab: How a Red Sea Chokepoint Can Shake Oil and Food Markets

June 11, 2026
A Field Report from Iran: Nurses Who Carry Life in the Heart of Death
Economy

A Field Report from Iran: Nurses Who Carry Life in the Heart of Death

June 11, 2026
A Tribute to Marjane Satrapi: What It Means to Die of Grief
Featured Items

A Tribute to Marjane Satrapi: What It Means to Die of Grief

June 11, 2026
The Destruction of Iran’s Pasteur Institute During the War
Human Rights

The Destruction of Iran’s Pasteur Institute During the War

June 3, 2026
Beyond Missiles: War’s Impact on Children with Disabilities and Additional Support Needs
Featured Items

Beyond Missiles: War’s Impact on Children with Disabilities and Additional Support Needs

June 3, 2026
Radio Zamaneh

© 2026 Zamaneh Media

More information

  • Sponsors
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Other ways to give
  • Legal

Follow Us

When The Internet Goes Dark, We Go On Air... Donate in:
USD EUR / All Currencies

When The Internet Goes Dark, We Go On Air...Donate in:
USD EUR / All
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Advertise
  • About Zamaneh Media
    • Sponsors
    • Donate
    • Vacancies
    • Contact us
    • Legal
    • Republishing Guidelines

© 2026 Zamaneh Media