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Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Senior Iranian cleric’s state of health sharply deteriorates
2007-07-20
Tehran, Iran, Jul. 19 – One of Iran’s most senior clerics has been taken to intensive care after the state of his health sharply deteriorated, it was announced on Thursday.

Ayatollah Ali Meshkini, Chairman of the Assembly of Experts, is currently connected to an intensive care unit (ICU) artificial breathing apparatus. He is suffering from a blood disease that has badly damaged his body’s self-defence mechanism, according to the state-run news agency ISNA.
Leukemia? Myelodysplastic syndrome? Sepsis?
AIDS.
The news agency Fars, operated by the office of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, reported that Meshkini had gone into shock on several occasions on Thursday. He is currently undergoing treatment at a Tehran hospital.

In February, Meshkini was re-appointed as head of the Assembly of Experts, a key constitutional supervisory body, amid speculation that he would forego the position to Iran’s former President Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. Meshkini is also the Friday prayers leader in the holy city of Qom.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Senior cleric retains top post in Iran’s constitutional body
2007-02-22
Tehran, Iran, Feb. 21 – A senior Iranian cleric has retained his post as head of a key constitutional supervisory body, amid speculation that he would forego the position to Iran’s former President Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

Ayatollah Ali Meshkini took his seat as Chairman of the Assembly of Experts in the first round of the assembly’s 4th session on Tuesday. Despite backroom chatter that Rafsanjani would contest for leadership of the assembly, Meshkini took control unchallenged. Rafsanjani along with another hard-line cleric Ayatollah Mohammad-Taqi Mesbah-Yazdi were appointed as the constitutional body’s vice-chairmen.
Rafsanjani was elected Miss Congeniality.
The 86-member Assembly of Experts is an exclusively clerical body entrusted with the task of selecting the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution.
Thereby keeping the reins of power in the hands of the Mad Mullahs™.
Assembly members are elected to eight-year terms. Polling for the 4th assembly was conducted in December. Following strict vetting of candidates by the Guardians Council, however, some districts were left with only one candidate. Far from being a popularity contest, analysts described the poll as a manifestation of factional feuding.
Factional feuds in a thuggish theocracy? Reeeeeaaallly?
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran reformists stage comeback?
2006-12-18
Ultra-conservatives close to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad have failed to sweep the country’s local council and Assembly of Experts elections, with moderate forces performing well, initial results showed on Sunday.

Centrist cleric Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani reaped by far the most votes, beating a hardline rival, Ayatollah Mohammad Taghi Mesbah Yazdi, viewed as Ahmadinejad’s spiritual mentor, in the Assembly of Experts elections. According to partial results, Rafsanjani held first place with 1.3 million votes, almost half a million more than the second placed cleric, the current head of the body, Ayatollah Ali Meshkini.
Calling Rafsanjani a "centrist" is purdy good disinformation, PakiWaki DT.
Quik Quiz: Stalin | Beria | Trotsky -- Pick the "centrist".
Which reminds me, didn't the "Ultras" know Stalin's Maxim:
"It's not the people who vote that count. It's the people who count the votes."
Truth... but the best part is that Stalin didn't say it, lol.
In the keenly-watched race for the Tehran city council, reformists were on course to take a handful of seats and end its total conservative domination of the body. “The results are a clear defeat for the allies of Ahmadinejad,” said the main Participation Front reformist party. “Voters said a resounding ‘no’ to the incompetence and authoritarian methods of the government.”
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Senior Iran cleric’s ailment causes a stir in Tehran
2006-04-19
London, Apr. 18 – Against a backdrop of mounting international concern over Iran’s nuclear brinkmanship, Tehran has been abuzz in recent days with rumours about the rapidly deteriorating health of a senior ayatollah and the impact of his probable departure from the country’s political scene. Ayatollah Ali Meshkini, older than Moses 85, is chairman of the Assembly of Experts, a body of senior clerics entrusted with the task of selecting the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution.

Meshkini is reportedly afflicted with an advanced form of cancer and has been undergoing chemotherapy for the past three months. The frail and emaciated cleric delivered the opening speech of a three-day session of the Assembly of Experts in March, but he was so ill that he had to leave shortly afterwards. The rest of the session was chaired by Meshkini’s deputy, former President Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

Ayatollah Meshkini is also the Friday prayers leader in the holy city of Qom, Iran’s most important Shiite theological centre. Last week, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei appointed a hard-line cleric, Ayatollah Reza Ostadi, to lead the weekly congregation in Meshkini’s place. The senior cleric holds a number of other positions and is a leading figure in the powerful Association of Theological Scholars.
Sounds like a real Qur'an thumper.
In his sensitive position as the chairman of the Assembly of Experts, Meshkini has been an indispensable ally for Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. His strong ties to Khamenei were instrumental in helping the relatively junior cleric to assume the mantle of leadership after the demise of the founder of the Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, in June 1989.

In January 1989, Meshkini was among a close circle of confidants who strongly urged Khomeini to sack his nominated successor, Grand Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri. Montazeri was publicly disgraced by Khomeini after he objected to the mass execution of political prisoners in Iran in 1988. Meshkini’s son-in-law, Ayatollah Mohammadi Reyshahri, who at the time headed the country’s secret police known as the Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS), played a key role in Montazeri’s fall from grace.
I'm sure Dan Darling has a scorecard for all this.
The departure of Meshkini from the political scene will deprive Khamenei of a key ally and will lead to a new round of infighting within the clerical leadership as to who would succeed him. Ayatollah Ebrahim Amini, a respected senior cleric, is said to be ill and would not stand in next year’s elections for the Assembly of Experts. This leaves Rafsanjani as a likely candidate for the leadership of the Assembly. But senior clerics close to Khamenei are strongly opposed to such an eventuality and are already manoeuvring to have a Khamenei ally replace Meshkini.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran’s rulers amass fortunes through sleaze
2006-03-01
Iran Focus has obtained exclusive information from a reliable source in Iran throwing light on sleaze at the senior echelons of officialdom in the Islamic Republic.

The source has provided Iran Focus with a list of senior officials of the clerical regime and the personal fortune each one has amassed. Most of these officials have risen from lower middle class backgrounds to fabulous wealth gathered through corruption and embezzlement.

At eighth place is Ali Jannati, son of powerful cleric Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati and a senior official in Iran’s Interior Ministry. The Jannati family’s private wealth is estimated at two trillion Rials, the equivenlt of $220 million. Senior cleric Ahmad Jannati is the head of the powerful Guardians Council and a close advisor to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

At seventh place is Ayatollah Abolghassem Khazali, former member of the Guardians Council. The powerful council whose members are handpicked by the Supreme Leader is comprised of six clerics and six senior judges and has the power to veto any Majlis legislation. Khazali’s estimated wealth is 2.5 trillion Rials, the equivalent of $275 million, coming mostly from sea trading, paper imports, and book sales.

At sixth place is Ayatollah Mohammad Yazdi, Iran’s former Judiciary Chief and another member of the Guardians Council. The senior cleric’s estimated wealth stands at three trillion Rials, the equivalent of $330 million.

At fifth place is Iraqi-born Ayatollah Mohammad-Ali Taskhiri, who for years headed the Islamic Culture and Communications Organisation (ICCO). Since 1995, the ICCO has been active in exporting fundamentalism and propaganda directed against Iranian dissidents outside of Iran. Khamenei himself is in charge of the organisation’s policymaking council and its meetings are held at his residence. Adding up the lands in his name and his cash flow, Taskhiri’s personal wealth is above three trillion Rials, the equivalent of $330 million.

Number four in Iran’s rich list is Ayatollah Ali Meshkini, Speaker of the Assembly of Experts, the exclusively clerical body that designates the country’s Supreme Leader. In a country where many of the theocracy’s ruling elite are in-laws, Meshkini is father in law to Mohammad Reyshahri, the Islamic Republic’s first Minister of Intelligence and Security. Meshkini’s personal wealth, coming in from mostly sugar trade and the industrial-scale printers, is well above three trillion Rials, the equivalent of $330 million.

Well ahead at third place is the former Commandant of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) Mohsen Rezai. Rezai, a close aide to former President Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, has amassed a personal wealth of six trillion Rials, or $660 million. While at the top of the IRGC, Rezai was known by many titles ranging from Major General to “darsadgir General” (literally, the general that takes commissions).

Number two on the list of officials who have become notoriously rich is Ayatollah Vaez Tabasi, known widely as the Sultan of Khorassan. Vaez Tabasi and his children have amassed an estimated fortune of seven trillion Rials, or $770 million. Their income primarily comes from sugar trade and the sale of real estate in Iran’s central Qods province.

At the top slot comes, unsurprisingly to Iran observers, Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, whose family rules over a vast financial and business empire. From the pistachio farms of his hometown Rafsanjan to huge oil trading companies, the ruling theocracy’s former president has used his power and influence to expand his wealth. Conservative estimates put his fortune at well beyond the 10 trillion Rial mark, the equivalent of $1.1 billion.

Most of the powerful cleric’s enormous wealth is vested in the hands of his sons and daughters, as well as other close relatives such as his brothers, nephews, and bother-in-laws, and son-in-laws. One of his villas was sold in 2004 for roughly 29 billion Rials. His brother, Mohammad Hashemi, the former chief of the state broadcasting corporation, owns the company Taha, which imports industrial-scale printers.

The image of “rich ayatollahs driving around in bullet-proof Mercedes” has become the butt of many jokes and the cause of much resentment in a country where, according to World Bank figures, the per capital income has fallen to a fifth of its 1970s value. Despite Iran’s huge export revenues and unexpected surpluses from the giant oil market jumps in recent months and years, the country’s budget is constantly in a state of flux showing no signs that it will sustain any time soon, inflation is at 16 percent and rising, and the economic growth rate is projected to fall throughout 2006.
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Axis of Evil
Meshkini accuses Taheri of ''fomenting division''
2002-07-21
A leading conservative cleric launched a public attack on a reformist colleague's criticism of the Islamic state Sunday, despite appeals for calm from supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Ayatollah Ali Meshkini, prayer leader of the holy city of Qom, accused his former opposite number in the central city of Isfahan, Ayatollah Jalaleddin Taheri, of seeking to "foment division between the people and the Islamic system" with his shock resignation earlier this month. Meshkini's comments, published in the daily Iran, came despite repeated appeals from supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei for rival conservatives and reformers to tone down their rhetoric in the face of unprecedented factional tensions within the regime.
Ummm... I think the Revolutionary Guards just went over the top in that department. Is the civil war under way yet?
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