Site icon Iran Times

Ailing official highlights concentration of power in Iran

June 20-2014

By Mehdi Khalaji

Last week, Muhammad Reza Mahdavi Kani, who heads Iran’s Assembly of Experts, suffered a stroke and fell into a coma from which doctors do not expect him to recover. Rumors around Tehran even suggest that the eighty-three-year-old official has died but that the announcement of his death has been postponed until a successor can be named. The jockeying for Mahdavi Kani’s position could be intense, given that the Assembly of Experts head names a successor upon the Supreme Leader’s own death. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is seventy-five, and the state of his health is unknown.

Mahdavi Kani is a leading figure among conservatives who played a significant role in consolidating Khamenei’s power. He holds several high-level positions, as is common among the Iranian elite, including membership in the Expediency Council and presidency of Imam Sadeq University, an institution designed to train cadres for government service, especially in the foreign and intelligence ministries. Mahdavi Kani also exemplifies the nepotism that pervades the Iranian scene. For instance:

Such a heavy concentration of power means fewer top positions are available to talented people without family connections. This breeds resentment against the regime, with bitter complaints about the aqazadeh (children of the elite). However much this resentment may surge after Mahdavi Kani’s exit, high-level positions in Iran are sure to remain in the hands of a select group.

 

Mehdi Khalaji is a senior fellow at The Washington Institute.

Exit mobile version