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Rouhani says Iran voters chose ‘right and proper path’

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Iranian voters chose "the right and proper path for the country", moderate President Hassan Rouhani said on Tuesday after final election results showed his allies had made significant gains.

Friday's twin elections -- to parliament and to top clerical committee, the Assembly of Experts -- were crucial for the president and a de-facto referendum on his administration after its nuclear deal with world powers.

In the parliamentary election, hardliners who vocally opposed Rouhani's diplomacy with the West and his moves to open Iran up to foreign investment were soundly beaten by reformists. Conservatives also lost seats.

"The owners of this country are the people... they determine the path and direction of this country," the president said.

"I thank our intelligent and brave people who have taken a step forward," he said at an auto industry conference in Tehran.

Buoyed by new backing from reformists supportive of the government, the president urged a spirit of cooperation among MPs from across Iran's political spectrum.

"If there are still some who think that the country must be in confrontation with others, they still haven't got the message of 2013," he said, alluding to his landslide presidential election victory on a pledge to end years of standoff over Iran's nuclear programme and crippling sanctions.

No single group won a decisive share of parliament's 290 seats, but tallies suggested the pragmatic Rouhani would be able to forge a working majority.

The main conservative list secured 103 MPs, reformists and moderates 95, and independents 14, while five seats went to minorities and four to candidates with no single affiliation.

While conservatives were wiped out by reformists in Tehran, they retained some seats in other cities and enjoyed strong support in rural areas.

Some 69 constituencies had no clear winner, meaning a second round runoff in April in a field that has more conservatives than reformists and moderates.

The outcome signalled strong public support for the nuclear deal between Iran and world powers, an agreement steered by the president which saw the lifting of sanctions in January.

"Cooperation should be everyone's concern. Today the era of confrontation is over," Rouhani added.

Friday's second election for the Assembly of Experts also produced high-profile gains for Rouhani and his closest allies.

Two renowned hardline ayatollahs lost their seats on the 88-member assembly, which monitors supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's work and will pick the 76-year-old's successor if he dies during its eight-year term.

By contrast, 15 of the 16 candidates running in Tehran on the list headed by Rouhani and his veteran political backer, former president Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, were resoundingly voted in.

Iranian voters chose “the right and proper path for the country”, moderate President Hassan Rouhani said on Tuesday after final election results showed his allies had made significant gains.

Friday’s twin elections — to parliament and to top clerical committee, the Assembly of Experts — were crucial for the president and a de-facto referendum on his administration after its nuclear deal with world powers.

In the parliamentary election, hardliners who vocally opposed Rouhani’s diplomacy with the West and his moves to open Iran up to foreign investment were soundly beaten by reformists. Conservatives also lost seats.

“The owners of this country are the people… they determine the path and direction of this country,” the president said.

“I thank our intelligent and brave people who have taken a step forward,” he said at an auto industry conference in Tehran.

Buoyed by new backing from reformists supportive of the government, the president urged a spirit of cooperation among MPs from across Iran’s political spectrum.

“If there are still some who think that the country must be in confrontation with others, they still haven’t got the message of 2013,” he said, alluding to his landslide presidential election victory on a pledge to end years of standoff over Iran’s nuclear programme and crippling sanctions.

No single group won a decisive share of parliament’s 290 seats, but tallies suggested the pragmatic Rouhani would be able to forge a working majority.

The main conservative list secured 103 MPs, reformists and moderates 95, and independents 14, while five seats went to minorities and four to candidates with no single affiliation.

While conservatives were wiped out by reformists in Tehran, they retained some seats in other cities and enjoyed strong support in rural areas.

Some 69 constituencies had no clear winner, meaning a second round runoff in April in a field that has more conservatives than reformists and moderates.

The outcome signalled strong public support for the nuclear deal between Iran and world powers, an agreement steered by the president which saw the lifting of sanctions in January.

“Cooperation should be everyone’s concern. Today the era of confrontation is over,” Rouhani added.

Friday’s second election for the Assembly of Experts also produced high-profile gains for Rouhani and his closest allies.

Two renowned hardline ayatollahs lost their seats on the 88-member assembly, which monitors supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s work and will pick the 76-year-old’s successor if he dies during its eight-year term.

By contrast, 15 of the 16 candidates running in Tehran on the list headed by Rouhani and his veteran political backer, former president Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, were resoundingly voted in.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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