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The Muttawaciin conservative hardliner won in Iran mashaAlla

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Aiman
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The Muttawaciin conservative hardliner won in Iran mashaAlla

Postby Aiman » Sat Jun 25, 2005 3:12 am

====================بِسْمِ اللهِ الرَّحْمنِ الرَّحِيمِ ==================
===============================================

Asalaamu Caleykum Waraxmatullaahi Wabarakaatuh my dear brothers & sisters in Islam and peace to non Muslim

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Bacadu Salaam,

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Hardline Mayor Wins Iran Presidential Race By KATHY GANNON, Associated Press Writer
56 minutes ago



TEHRAN, Iran - The hardline Tehran mayor steamrolled over one of Iran's best-known statesman to win the presidency Saturday in a landslide election victory that cements conservative control over the nation's political leadership.

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The outcome capped a stunning upset by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who many reformers fear will take Iran back to the restrictions imposed after the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

The Interior Ministry gave Ahmadinejad 62.2 percent of the vote over his more moderate rival, Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani, who had nearly 35.3 percent. The ministry posted a notice in its headquarters declaring Ahmadinejad the winner of Friday's runoff. The rest of the ballots were deemed invalid.

The figures were based on more than 90 percent of the estimated 26 million votes cast, or nearly 55 percent of Iran's about 47 million eligible voters. In last week's first round of the presidential election, the turnout was close to 63 percent.

The victory gives conservatives control of Iran's two highest elected offices — the presidency and parliament — and gives a freer hand to the non-elected theocracy, which holds the final word on all important policies.

Clerics led by supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei have true power in Iran, able to overrule elected officials. But reformers, who lost parliament in elections last year, had been hoping to retain some hand in government to preserve the greater social freedoms they've been able to win, such as looser dress codes, more mixing between the sexes and openings to the West.

In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Joanne Moore indicated the result would not change the U.S. view of Iran, and what it considered to be a fundamentally flawed election that refused to accept scores of candidates, particularly women.

"With the conclusion of the elections in Iran, we have seen nothing that sways us from our view that Iran is out of step with the rest of the region in the currents of freedom and liberty that have been so apparent in Iraq, Afghanistan and Lebanon," Moore said.

Ahmadinejad supporters will go to mosques to hold prayers and "thank God for this great victory," said his campaign manager Ali Akbar Javanfekr. But he said no street celebrations are planned.

The streets of Tehran were quiet before dawn. State television announced the results in its dawn bulletin, but there were no immediate outdoor celebrations.

Ahmadinejad is expected to start consultations soon on selecting his Cabinet. People will watch to see if he chooses clerics such as Ayatollah Mesbah Yazdi, a firebrand who has been mooted for the Culture Ministry — a post that controls the arts, publications and the cinema.

Ahmadinejad, the 49-year-old mayor of the capital, campaigned as a champion of the poor, a message that resonated with voters in a country where some estimates put unemployment as high as 30 percent. He struck the image of a simple working man against Rafsanjani, a wealthy member of the country's ruling elite.

"The real nuclear bomb that Iran has is its unemployed young people," said Ali Pourassad, after casting his vote for Ahmadinejad at a polling station set up in the courtyard of a mosque in the middle-class south of Tehran. "If nothing is done to create jobs for our young people, we will have an explosion on the streets."

But Ahmadinejad also vowed to return Iran to the principles of the Islamic Revolution more than a quarter-century ago. Such comments and reports about his inner circle of supporters — members of the Revolutionary Guard, the vigilantes who enforce public dress codes and some of the most hard-line clerics in Iran's theocracy — frightened Iran's reformers.

Ahmadinejad (pronounced "Aah-MA-dee-ni-JAHD") had not been expected even to make the runoff. But he squeaked ahead of his rivals into the No. 2 spot in last week's first-round vote. There were accusations that Revolutionary Guards and vigilantes intimidated voters to sway the vote in his favor.

Going into the first round, the 70-year-old Rafsanjani had been considered by far the favorite. But he was battered, placing first with only 21 percent in that round.

During Friday's voting, the reformist-led Interior Ministry reported "interference" at some Tehran polling stations. A ministry worker who was at a polling station reminding officials to watch for violations was arrested after he got in an argument with representatives of one of the two candidates, ministry spokesman Jahanbakhsh Khanjani said.

An Interior Ministry observers' group reported 300 complaints of violations in Tehran, said group leader Ibrahim Razini.

In the eyes of most, Rafsanjani — who was president from 1989-97 — represented the status quo. Backers felt confident he would continue the many social changes introduced by outgoing President Mohammad Khatami, including youth-supported freedoms such as dating, music, and colorful headscarves for women.

Rafsanjani now appears to be facing his political grave. He was humbled in 2000 when he failed to win a seat in parliament. He may retain his seat on the Expediency Council, which mediates between parliament and the ruling clerics, but he now casts the shadow of a two-time loser.

Ahmadinejad's surprising strength alarmed moderates and business groups at home and was watched with concern by international officials. Ahmadinejad would likely be a tough negotiating partner in Iran's talks with Europe over its nuclear program, which the United States contends aims to develop a nuclear weapon. Iran says the program aims only for producing energy.

He has criticized Iran's current negotiators as making too many concessions to Europe — particularly in freezing the uranium enrichment program — and he was expected to put Iran's nuclear program into the hands of some avowed anti-Western clerics.

The pragmatic Rafsanjani has appeared more willing to negotiate on the nuclear program. But a Foreign Ministry spokesman Friday underlined that the suspension is temporary and that enrichment will eventually be restarted no matter who wins the election.

But for many Iranians, the biggest issue was an economy that has languished despite Iran's oil and gas riches. Iran's official unemployment rate is 16 percent, but unofficially it is closer to 30 percent — and the country has to create 800,000 jobs a year just to stand still. In the fall, another million young people are expected to enter the work force.

Ahmadinejad, the son of a blacksmith, presented himself as the humble alternative to Rafsanjani, whose family runs a large business empire. He has promised Iran's underclass higher wages, more development funds for rural areas, expanded health insurance and more social benefits for women.

"Every vote you cast is a bullet in the hearts" of the United States, said Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, head of the Guardian Council and considered a leading supporter of Ahmadinejad.

"What they (Western countries) have is not democracy, but rule of trickery. It's parties and capitalists who get the vote of the people in their own favor to fill their pockets," he told worshippers at Friday prayers.

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Associated Press correspondents Brian Murphy and Ali Akbar Dareini contributed to this report from Tehran.

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Awguriyo the Muttawaciin conservative hardliner based in Iran won the presidentcy against the reformist or liberal whatever they call themselves; Maasha Allah, that means we don't have a Dabadhilif regime to be pet by the western zionist. We need to eliminate those Dabadhilif regime pets of the western kuffar.

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Yours: Islamic Republic of Somalinet Muttawaciin

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Postby Globetrotter- » Sat Jun 25, 2005 3:36 am

AIMAN,

ANSWER THIS QUESTION HONESTLY:

Do you blv shias are muslims????

Many somalis and sunnis blv the shias are worser than kufrs

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Postby Adanna » Sat Jun 25, 2005 5:23 am

Globetrotter..I would say that many somalis (and muslims) are worse than kuffr. Who are you to claim that shias aren't good muslims?

A friend of mine told me about one of his propaganda commercials (about how he realises how much in need the poor ppl are), she and her family refused to take part inthe elections yesterday..I hope he makes good of his promises. It's true that Iran consists of a whole lot of young ppl who are fed up, being out of job only fuels their anger. But at the same time, if jobs were so easy to create, they would all have been employed by now...that's why I think his promises are so risky (for his administration and the entire iranian regime).

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Postby COSTA » Sat Jun 25, 2005 6:35 am

shica jews christians ==same shit

all of them are kufaar


globe and you still sukking my dikk

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Postby Aiman » Sat Jun 25, 2005 7:57 pm

[quote="Globetrotter-"]AIMAN,

ANSWER THIS QUESTION HONESTLY:

Do you blv shias are muslims????

Many somalis and sunnis blv the shias are worser than kufrs[/quote]

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Bismillah,

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Ofcourse they are Muslim.

The only thing that is worser than kufr are the Hypocrites AKA Munaafiq.

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Postby Modern-poli » Sat Jun 25, 2005 8:18 pm

"As a student, Ahmadinejad joined an ultraconservative faction of the Office for Strengthening Unity, the radical student group spawned by the 1979 Islamic Revolution that staged the capture of the U.S. Embassy."

man i hope they don't assassinate the this guy...

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Postby dhuusa_deer » Sat Jun 25, 2005 8:23 pm

"man i hope they don't assassinate the this guy..."

Why? He is only aiding the implosion of Iran. I give it 2-3 years tops.

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Postby Modern-poli » Sat Jun 25, 2005 8:43 pm

[quote="dhuusa_deer"]"man i hope they don't assassinate the this guy..."

Why? He is only aiding the implosion of Iran. I give it 2-3 years tops.[/quote]

Dude if anything is imploding today it's the US. With their balance of payment defict and weakaning infrastructure the US is is a weak hegemon. Oh, and dont' forget their $1.3 Trillion in Deficits, no special drawind rights that can help them out today. If that isn't an imposion than i dont' know what is.

Actually, i'd like to see them assassinate this dude, they'd have 70 mill angry Iranians Laughing Laughing

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Postby Globetrotter- » Sun Jun 26, 2005 2:38 am

Aiman, you must be the weakest character on somalinet. I recall you claiming on a number of occassions that the shias were non-muslims. I wonder what has become of you.

Adana, I ask that question because Aiman et al don't blv the shias are muslims.

Aiman, who are you afraid of???????????

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Postby intellex » Sun Jun 26, 2005 7:13 am

[quote="Globetrotter-"]Aiman, you must be the weakest character on somalinet. I recall you claiming on a number of occassions that the shias were non-muslims. I wonder what has become of you.

Adana, I ask that question because Aiman et al don't blv the shias are muslims.

Aiman, who are you afraid of???????????[/quote]

kaafirnimo + oromo nimo+ been= rufyaan nimo Laughing Laughing

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Re: The Muttawaciin conservative hardliner won in Iran mashaAlla

Postby paidmonk » Tue Jun 26, 2007 3:36 pm

great news.

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Re: The Muttawaciin conservative hardliner won in Iran mashaAlla

Postby COSTA » Tue Jun 26, 2007 3:39 pm

2005? Shocked


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