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Afrasiabi Analyzes Mousavi’s Complaint

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ahmadinejad-mousaviAccording to an article in the Asia Times by scholar and author Kaveh L. Afrasiabi, regardless of whether or not the Iranian elections were fraudulent, the evidence presented by Mir-Houssein Mousavi in his official complaint to the Guardian Council was not strong enough to grant “annulment of the result”.  As a side note, Dr. Afrasiabi is one Iranian-American academic who has defended some of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s policies in the context of Foreign Policy (not domestic), citing Iran’s growing role as a “regional powerhouse” as one such indication of this fact. 

To watch a short debate between Dr. Afrasiabi and Iranian-American scholar and feminist Dr. Janet Afary on the question of whether or not the Iranian Election was fraudulent, click here.

Iran: Mousavi States His Case – by Kaveh L Afrasiabi

Mir Hossein Mousavi, the reformist candidate challenging Iran’s authorities on the result of last week’s presidential elections, is a masterful tactician who wants to overturn the re-election of his rival, President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, with allegations of a massive conspiracy that he claims cheated him and millions of his supporters.

These supporters, identifiable by the color green they have adopted, have taken to the streets in the tens of thousands and on Thursday were to stage a “day of mourning” for what they say is a lost election.  This follows a “silent” march through the streets of the capital on Wednesday.  To date, at least 10 people — some Iranian sources say 32 — have been killed in clashes.

Mousavi has lodged an official complaint with the powerful 12-member Guardians Council, which has ordered a partial recount of the vote.  The complaint’s main flaw is that it passes improper or questionable pre-election conduct as something else, that is, as evidence of voting fraud.

The protest, which seeks fresh elections, is short on specifics and long on extraneous, election-unrelated complaints.  The first two items relate to the televised debates that were held between the candidates, rather than anything germane to the vote count.

There is also some innuendo, such as a claim that Ahmadinejad used state-owned means of transportation to campaign around the country, overlooking that there is nothing unusual about incumbent leaders using the resources at their disposal for election purposes.  All previous presidents, including the reformist Mohammad Khatami, who is a main supporter of Mousavi, did the same.

Another complaint by Mousavi is that Ahmadinejad had disproportionate access to the state-controlled media.  This has indeed been a bad habit in the 30-year history of the Islamic Republic, but perhaps less so this year because for the first time there were television debates, six of them, which allowed Mousavi and the other challengers free space to present their points of view.

With respect to alleged specific irregularities, the complaint cites a shortage of election forms that in some places caused a “few hours delay”.  This is something to complain about, but it hardly amounts to fraud, especially as voter turnout was a record high of 85% of the eligible 46 million voters.  (Ahmadinejad was credited with 64% of the vote.)

Mousavi complains that in some areas the votes cast were higher than the number of registered voters.  But he fails to add that some of those areas, such as Yazd, were places where he received more votes that Ahmadinejad.

Furthermore, Mousavi complains that some of his monitors were not accredited by the Interior Ministry and therefore he was unable to independently monitor the elections.  However, several thousand monitors representing the various candidates were accredited and that included hundreds of Mousavi’s eyes and ears.

They should have documented any irregularities that, per the guidelines, should have been appended to his complaint.  Nothing is appended to Mousavi’s two-page complaint, however.  He does allude to some 80 letters that he had previously sent to the Interior Ministry, without either appending those letters or restating their content.

Finally, item eight of the complaint cites Ahmadinejad’s recourse to the support given by various members of Iran’s armed forces, as well as Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki’s brief campaigning on Ahmadinejad’s behalf.  These are legitimate complaints that necessitate serious scrutiny since by law such state individuals are forbidden to take sides.  It should be noted that Mousavi can be accused of the same irregularity as his headquarters had a division devoted to the armed forces.

Given the thin evidence presented by Mousavi, there can be little chance of an annulment of the result.

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Kaveh L Afrasiabi, PhD, is the author of After Khomeini: New Directions in Iran’s Foreign Policy.  His latest book, Reading in Iran Foreign Policy after September 11, is now available. 

 


Written by Jasmin

June 21, 2009 at 6:59 pm

3 Responses

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  1. Kaveh Afrasiabi has given new meaning to “loose translation”.

    Or, he is referring to the FIRST letter Mousavi wrote to the guardian council just days after the elections were held, in which he voiced his general concerns, and not the one he wrote YESTERDAY in which he specifically mentions his SEVEN allegations of fraud which include:

    1. His monitors WERE NOT allowed to verify that the boxes were EMPTY prior to voting. As I mention on my blog, there are RECORDED instances at the interior ministry during past presidential elections where for instance, in one province alone, five hundred thousand ballots were put in the boxes before voting even began.

    http://www.sidewalklyrics.com/?p=729

    2. Regarding the monitors, in this second letter he goes on at lengths about SIX different excuses used to turn A SUBSTANTIAL NUMBER of his monitors away.

    3. According to the Iranian constitution, for Iran’s mountainous regions, “Moving Voting Centers” are used so that people can have easier access. In his letter, Mousavi writes that for the first time this year, there were numerous such voting centers used in regions where they were had never been used before and were not needed. More problematic is that this had NOT BEEN MENTIONED to the candidates and so no monitors were present except those of the guardian council. He contacted the interior ministry about this the day of the election but was never given an answer.

    4. Before the election, while the center for statistics in Iran had estimated that the number of eligible voters was around 45, 200, 000, the interior ministry announced that it was printed 59, 600,000 forms. The day PRIOR to the election, over TWO MILLION more forms were printed without a serial #. DESPITE THIS, on the day of the elections, in regions such as Shiraz, Tabriz, and the northern provinces where Mousavi was widely popular, VOTERS WERE TURNED AWAY and told that the voting centers had run out of forms.

    5. Those monitors who were given the chance to stay (the ones Afrasiabi mentions) WERE NOT ALLOWED to take their counted results to the governors office of each province, which is the most important part of the counting process, where the votes the monitors have counted get sent to the head office of interior ministry. So there is no way to verify what the results they counted were indeed the ones that the ministry used. While some voting centers were still open and people were voting, the ministry STARTED DECLARING OFFICIAL RESULTS ON NATIONAL TV WHICH IS UNPRECEDENTED. OFFICIAL RESULTS ARE NOT DECLARED UNTIL ALL VOTING CENTERS HAVE CLOSED.

    ——

    These were only a number of points Mousavi makes in his letter.

    Regarding Afrasiabi’s specific critiques here:
    ALL THREE CANDIDATES, Mousavi, Karoubi and Rezaie have stated that in 170 voting centers, the votes cast were higher than the number of registered voters. Yazd is ONLY ONE of these centers. In almost all the rest, Ahmadinejad has one up to 90% of the votes.

    A shortage of election forms that in some places DID NOT cause a “few hours delay” BUT VOTERS WERE TURNED AWAY in some places as early as 6 p.m. AND WERE NOT ALLOWED TO VOTE.

    Afrasiabi is either lying, or has not had a closer look at Mousavi’s letters. Especially where he writes one of Mousavi’s complaints is that “Ahmadinejad used state-owned means of transportation to campaign around the country”.

    Ahmadinejad is accused of UNLAWFULLY using government funds. One such case in my province of Khuzestan which I personally know of was when he FLEW ARAB TRIBAL LEADERS OF KHUZESTAN TO THE CAPITAL for one week prior to the election. Arab Tribes ALWAYS vote, and ALWAYS vote for whoever their leader endorses.

    Pedestrian

    June 21, 2009 at 8:10 pm

  2. Sorry for all the typos. I wrote/translated this in only a few minutes and didn’t proofread.

    I’ll be posting a more extensive translation of Mousavi’s second letter to the council on my blog later on today or tomorrow.

    Pedestrian

    June 21, 2009 at 8:22 pm

  3. Don’t worry about the typos – thanks for the response!

    Jasmin Ramsey

    June 21, 2009 at 9:44 pm


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