Ebrahim Raisi has been president of the Islamic Republic for three yearsin a context of strong international tensions and widespread internal protest. Ayatollah Raisi, 63, is considered an ultra-conservative and he was the candidate supported by the Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, in the 2021 presidential election, when his main rivals were prevented from running. With Raisi’s presidency, all branches of power in Iran came under the control of anti-Western extremist factions loyal to Khamenei, and the repression of dissent intensified.
Raisi missing after helicopter crash
Presenting himself as a champion of the disadvantaged classes and of the fight against corruption, Raisi was elected on 18 June 2021 in the first round of a vote characterized by record abstention and the absence of real competitors. He succeeded the more moderate Hassan Rouhani – supporter of the 2015 nuclear deal – who had beaten him in the 2017 presidential elections but could no longer run again after two consecutive terms. Raisi emerged strengthened from the legislative elections held last March, the first national consultation after the vast protest movement Woman, Life, Freedom that shook Iran at the end of 2022, following the death of Mahsa Amini, the girl who died in Tehran while she was in the custody of the moral police, who had arrested her because she would not wear the veil correctly. The Parliament, which will take office on May 27, will be largely under the control of the conservatives and ultra-conservatives, who support his government.
Iran, the faithful pray for President Raisi: images from state TV
In the last months, Raisi presented himself as a resolute opponent of Israel, the sworn enemy of the Islamic Republic, supporting Hamas since the beginning of the war with Israel in the Gaza Strip, following the October 7 carnage in the kibbutzim. He welcomed the unprecedented attack launched by Iran on April 13 against Israel, with 350 drones and missiles, most of which were intercepted with the help of the United States and numerous other allied countries.
Iran, President Raisi in flight on the day his helicopter made an emergency landing
Born in November 1960 in the Shiite holy city of Mashhad (North-East), Raisi rose through the ranks of the judiciary for three decades, having been appointed prosecutor general of Karaj, near Tehran, at just 20 years old, in the wake of the victory of the Islamic Revolution in 1979. In 2016, Khamenei placed him at the helm of the powerful charitable foundation Astan Quds Razavi, which manages the Imam Reza mausoleum in Mashhad as well as immense industrial and real estate assets. In 2019, Khamenei placed him at the helm of the judiciary and shortly thereafter US sanctions began against him for the role he played in the executions of thousands of political prisoners in 1988; a responsibility that earned him the nickname “butcher of Tehran”. Iran has never acknowledged these killings. As dissidents feared, his presidency saw a surge in executions and repression.
Iran, fog complicates the search for President Raisi’s helicopter
Without much charisma and always wearing the classic black turban that characterizes the ‘seyyed’, the descendants of Muhammad, Raisi attended Ayatollah Khamenei’s Islamic religion and jurisprudence courses. She is married to Jamileh Alamolhoda, professor of education at Shahid Beheshti University in Tehran, with whom he had two daughters. The Iranian president is considered among the favorites to succeed the now elderly and ill Khamenei. If he had lost his life in today’s accident, the leadership of the government would pass to his deputy, Mohammad Mokhber, and new elections should be called within the next 50 days.
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