Ally of Ahmadinejad Freed Amid Political Fight, Reports Say
TEHRAN — As President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
escalated a bitter political fight this week with Iran's most
influential political family by disclosing secret film recordings of
what he purported were fraudulent business deals, Iran's political
maneuvring took a new turn Wednesday when an imprisoned associate of the
president was reported to have been freed.
The
release of Saeed Mortazavi, reported by two Iranian news agencies, came
as the latest chapter in several days of political drama playing out
with prominence in the public eye.
During
a Sunday session of Parliament, broadcast on state radio, Mr.
Ahmadinejad singled out the head of the Parliament, Ali Larijani, a
political rival with strong links to influential Shiite Muslim clerics
and one of several brothers who have held top positions in the Iranian
government.
His younger brother
Sadegh, 52, heads Iran's judiciary, while his oldest brother, Mohammad
Javad, a Berkeley-educated mathematician, is also a judiciary official.
On Monday, a conservative
newspaper, Kayhan, hinted that the nation's supreme leader, Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei, had been forced to step in to prevent both men from giving
potentially damaging news conferences, which were both canceled at the
last minute.
This was not the first
time Ayatollah Khamenei has been forced to intervene in this feud. In
October, he issued an edict aimed at stopping the infighting, saying
that those creating divisions before the June 14 presidential elections
"betray" the country.
Mr.
Ahmadinejad, who went to the Parliament in a failed attempt to head off
the impeachment of his labor minister, Abdolreza Sheikholeslami, said
Mr. Larijani and his fellow lawmakers had obstructed the government,
stepped beyond their constitutional boundaries and written letters
ordering the annulment of government decisions.
Instructed
by Mr. Larijani to stick to the subject of the impeachment, Mr.
Ahmadinejad said, "Don't order me to close my mouth because you say it's
the law."
With that, Mr.
Ahmadinejad, who for years has threatened to reveal the names of corrupt
officials, played a video clip of a conversation in which another of
Mr. Larijani's brothers, Fazel, appeared to discuss the purchase of a
state company under favorable terms, the semiofficial Tabnak Web site
reported. While Fazel Larijani used to head a medical association in
Iran, his current position is unclear.
The
public accusation, rare in Iran, could signal a new phase in an already
intense conflict between Mr. Ahmadinejad, who represents a powerful
group of young, ambitious politicians, and Mr. Larijani, who is the
official representative of the holy city of Qum, the center of Shiite
scholarship in Iran.
Mr.
Ahmadinejad said his associate, Mr. Mortazavi, 45, was also at the taped
meeting. In January, Mr. Mortazavi was dismissed as the head of Iran's
enormous social welfare organization under pressure from Parliament.
Some days later, however, he was rehired by the president in the same
position, this time as official caretaker.
During
the conversation, read out in part by Mr. Ahmadinejad to astonished
lawmakers, Fazel Larijani appears to try to use his family connections
to buy a factory from the social welfare organization. He promises
leniency for Mr. Mortazavi, the former Tehran prosecutor who faces
several criminal proceedings over accusations that he played a role in
the deaths of three protesters in a substandard prison in 2009.
Mr.
Mortazavi was arrested Monday evening, the Fars news agency reported,
though no reason was given. But, in a new turn to what is likely to be a
protracted saga, he was freed on Wednesday, news reports quoted Iranian
media as saying. The terms of his release were unclear.
In
Parliament on Sunday, the Iranian Students' News Agency said, Mr.
Ahmadinejad declared: "These are audio and video, and the tape is
clear."
He added: "If the honorable
Parliament speaker sees fit, we can turn over the 24 to 25 hours to
you," he said of the recordings. On Monday, Iran's Islamic Republic News
Agency, a mouthpiece for Mr. Ahmadinejad, deepened the split by
publishing the audiotape on its Web site.
Ali
Larijani, cheered on by the Parliament, which has lost nearly every
serious political battle with the president, silenced the room, saying:
"Let him tell his words. If there is anything about my family, then let
him talk about it."
Mr. Larijani
called the video a "mafia film" and recalled how he had a meeting with
Mr. Ahmadinejad's estranged brother, Davoud. "He said many things
against you," Mr. Larijani told the president, "about economic
corruption, about your inner circle and your relations with foreign
countries."
For his part, Fazel
Larijani strongly denied any wrongdoing, saying that while he did appear
in the clip, the words were not his, but rather had been added in a
voiceover. Calling Mr. Ahmadinejad and Mr. Mortazavi "mafialike
individuals," he said he would sue them both for "spreading lies and
disturbing public opinion."
On
Monday, several officials criticized Mr. Ahmadinejad and Ali Larijani,
accusing them of lacking self-control and bringing shame on the country.
"They broke the leader's heart and gave the friends of the Islamic
republic almost a seizure," said Mojtaba Zolnour, a special consultant
to the supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, the semiofficial Iranian
Labor News Agency reported. "They provided ammunition for the foreign
media on the eve of our election."
Alan Cowell contributed reporting from Paris.
0 comments:
Post a Comment