Source: Human Rights
Watch
(Washington, DC, March 13, 2008) – Iran's exclusionary process of vetting
candidates for the March 14 parliamentary elections violates the principles of a
free and fair election, Human Rights Watch said today. The widespread
disqualifications of candidates, most from reformist factions, show that
authorities are rejecting candidates on politically motivated grounds.
The slate of candidates approved for the election
shows that reformists have been permitted to stand for only a minority of the
seats and therefore factions close to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei will win
a majority. While there will be much competition among hardliners, reformist
candidates are on the ballot in only about 106 out of the 290 districts.
"The Iranian authorities are effectively rigging
the elections by stacking the candidate lists," said Joe Stork, deputy director
of Human Rights Watch's Middle East and North Africa division. "It's clear
Iranian voters won't have a free say in choosing their representatives."
Candidates competing for 290 seats in the
republic's eighth parliament must submit to evaluations by both the Interior
Ministry and an unelected body of 12 religious jurists known as the Guardian
Council.
The Ministry of Interior conducts a first cut of
applicants based on criteria set by the election laws. While some of these
criteria are concrete, such as age limits and educational requirements, most are
so vague that they enable authorities to make sweeping decisions without
accountability.
Once the Ministry of Interior compiles a list of
"qualified" candidates, the Guardian Council reviews it and makes a final
decision on who may stand for election.
In January 2008, the Ministry of Interior
announced that it had rejected more than 2,000 out of 7,597 applicants, citing
such reasons for disqualifying candidates as "having ill repute in their place
of residency," "insulting religious sanctities," and "acting against the state."
The Guardian Council and members of the political
elite then carried out a series of secret negotiations for over a month, leading
to the reinstatement of some disqualified candidates and the exclusion of
others. The total number of disqualifications remained roughly the same.
Most of the disqualified candidates are
affiliated with reformist factions, notably those close to former president
Mohammad Khatami. Individuals identifying with the principalists, the hardliner
faction close to Khamenei, make up the majority of approved candidates.
In February 2008, Guardian Council spokesperson
Abbas-Ali Kadkhodayee claimed that complaints filed regarding disqualifications
would be assessed without political prejudice and asserted that "the majority if
not all" of the voting districts were competitive.
As a party to the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights (ICCPR), Iran is obligated to allow its citizens equal
opportunity to compete as candidates in elections, without being subject to
"unreasonable restrictions." The ICCPR requires elections to guarantee the "free
expression of the will of the electors."
For more of Human Rights Watch's work on Iran,
please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/doc?t=mideast&c=iran
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