Tehran - Iranian former president Mohammad Khatami quit the
presidential race on Monday night to support former prime minister
Mir-Hossein Moussavi in the June 12 election.
The two candidates had similar platforms, and observers believed
they could split the moderate vote to the advantage of President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, whose ultra-conservative faction has named him
as its sole candidate.
In a statement carried by his website, Yaari News, Khatami said he
withdrew his candidacy 'as a moral obligation for avoiding a split in
the votes.'
Khatami, who made the decision after a meeting with the reformist
clergy body MRM on Monday night in Tehran, reiterated in the
statement his support for Moussavi.
The ILNA news agency, which is close to Moussavi, had earlier
reported that Khatami did not want to compete against his close aide
although the reformist factions wanted the moderate cleric to stay.
'I meant what I said (last month) that there will be either me or
Moussavi in the presidential race,' said Khatami, who was culture
minister under Moussavi in the 1980s.
'The aim of running in an election is winning and I sincerely
believe that Moussavi has the potential to make the change and gain
the people's votes,' Khatami added.
Both Khatami and Moussavi are fierce opponents of Ahmadinejad.
Khatami had focused his campaign on political reforms, but Moussavi
has concentrated mainly on economic issues, which are seen as the
president's Achilles' heel.
Observers, however, say that Moussavi lacks the charisma of
Khatami and could not mobilize the masses like the moderate cleric
did back in 1997 and 2005.
But in return, Moussavi has the better know-how for managing
Iran's current economic crisis which is the main concern of voters in
the presidential election, far more than discussions over resuming
talks with the US over the nuclear dispute or the Middle East.
Former parliament speaker Mehdi Karroubi will also run for
president even though he too is a close aide of Khatami and Moussavi
and shares the same political standpoints.
Observers agree that any diversion among the moderate and
reformist factions prior to the June 12 poll will please Ahmadinejad
and his ultra-conservative backers and drastically increase his
chances for being re-elected.
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