'Moderate' cleric Hassan Rohani won Iran's Presidential election on Friday, but his victory is
unlikely to bring about any important changes in Iranian policy.
Najjar said 72 percent of the 50 million eligible Iranians had turned
out to vote, and that Rohani had secured just over the 50 percent of
the vote needed to avoid a run-off.
The outcome is unlikely to transform relations
between Iran and the outside world, the Islamic Republic's disputed policy on
developing nuclear power or its support of Syria's president in the civil war
there - all sensitive security matters that are the domain of Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
But the president does wield important influence
in decision-making in the sprawling Shi'ite Muslim nation and major OPEC state
of 75 million and could bring a change from the confrontational style of
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was constitutionally barred from seeking a
third consecutive term.
Rohani's wide early margin revealed a major
reservoir of pro-reform sentiment whereby many voters seized a chance to
repudiate the dominant hardline elite over Iran's economic woes, international
isolation and crackdowns on personal freedoms despite restrictions on candidate
choice and campaigning.
Rohani, a moderate who is a former
chief nuclear negotiator known for his conciliatory approach, has signaled he
will promote a foreign policy based on "constructive interaction with the world"
and enact a "civil rights charter" at home.
What could go wrong?
This is a very interesting outlook on the elections
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