Iran Presidential Candidates Trade Blame Over Economic Woes
Iran's reformist and ultraconservative presidential candidates traded accusations Saturday over the country's economic crisis during the first pre-election debate broadcast live on television.
Iranians are set to elect a
successor to President Hassan Rouhani on June 18 amid widespread discontent
over a deep economic and social crisis caused by the reimposition of crippling
sanctions after the US pulled out of the 2015 nuclear deal.
Iran's conservative-dominated
Guardian Council approved seven candidates -- five ultraconservative and two
reformists -- to run from a field of about 600 hopefuls.
Ultraconservative judiciary chief
Ebrahim Raisi is widely seen as a favorite, after the Council disqualified
moderate conservative Ali Larijani, according to AFP.
On Saturday, ultraconservative
candidates called on reformist hopeful Abdolnasser Hemmati, who is the
country's central bank governor, to take responsibility for the crisis, and accused
him of seeking to defend the government's record.
"Mr Hemmati, your governance was catastrophic,
you are sitting here as a representative of Mr Rouhani," said Mohsen
Rezai, a former chief of Iran's Revolutionary Guards.
Rouhani is Iran's main architect
of the 2015 nuclear agreement with world powers.
The accord has been on life
support since then-US president Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from it in
2018, and reimposed crippling sanctions.
Global powers have been meeting in
Vienna since early April in a bid to revive the accord.
Reformist Hemmati instead took aim
at his ultraconservative adversaries' economic plan, saying their pledges of
massive direct financial aid were "unrealisable".
He also accused them of
undermining Iran's international relations and preventing the country from
benefiting from the nuclear deal.
Ultraconservative Raisi, who took
38 percent of the vote in the 2017 presidential election, avoided direct
clashes with the reformists.
"Inflation is one of the serious problems people
are facing today. The price of basic products has gone up considerably,"
he said, adding that the "dishonesty of certain officials" was one of
the main worries of the Iranian people.
Iranian media has expressed
concern in recent weeks about the risk of low voter turnout.
A record 57 percent of Iranians
stayed away from parliamentary elections in February last year in which
thousands of candidates, many of them moderates and reformists, were barred
from running.
Further televised debates are due to be held on Tuesday and Saturday.