DUBAI, United
Arab Emirates (AP) -- Seesawing results released early Saturday in Iran's
presidential election put the race between reformist Masoud Pezeshkian and
hard-liner Saeed Jalili, with the lead trading between the two men while a
runoff vote appeared likely.
Iranian state
television reported the results which did not initially put either man in a
position to win Friday's election outright, potentially setting the stage for a
second round of voting to replace the late hard-line President Ebrahim Raisi.
It also did not
offer any turnout figures for the race yet -- a crucial component of whether
Iran's electorate backs its Shiite theocracy after years of economic turmoil
and mass protests.
After counting
over 19 million votes, Pezeshkian had 8.3 million while Jalili held 7.18
million.
Another
candidate, hard-line parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, had some 2.67
million votes. Shiite cleric Mostafa Pourmohammadi had over 158,000 votes.
Voters faced a
choice between the three hard-line candidates and the little-known reformist
Pezeshkian, a heart surgeon. As has been the case since the 1979 Islamic
Revolution, women and those calling for radical change have been barred from
running, while the vote itself will have no oversight from internationally
recognized monitors.
The voting came
as wider tensions have gripped the Middle East over the Israel-Hamas war in the
Gaza Strip.
In April, Iran
launched its first-ever direct attack on Israel over the war in Gaza, while
militia groups that Tehran arms in the region -- such as the Lebanese Hezbollah
and Yemen's Houthi rebels -- are engaged in the fighting and have escalated
their attacks.
Meanwhile, Iran
continues to enrich uranium at near weapons-grade levels and maintains a
stockpile large enough to build -- should it choose to do so -- several nuclear
weapons.
There had been
calls for a boycott, including from imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges
Mohammadi. Mir Hossein Mousavi, one of the leaders of the 2009 Green Movement
protests who remains under house arrest, also has refused to vote along with
his wife, his daughter said.
There's also been
criticism that Pezeshkian represents just another government-approved
candidate. One woman in a documentary on Pezeshkian aired by state TV said her
generation was "moving toward the same level" of animosity with the
government that Pezeshkian's generation had in the 1979 revolution.
Iranian law
requires that a winner gets more than 50% of all votes cast. If that doesn't
happen, the race's top two candidates will advance to a runoff a week later.
There's been only one runoff presidential election in Iran's history: in 2005,
when hard-liner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad bested former President Akbar Hashemi
Rafsanjani.
The 63-year-old
Raisi died in the May 19 helicopter crash that also killed the country's
foreign minister and others. He was seen as a protege of Iran's Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and a potential successor. Still, many knew him for his
involvement in the mass executions that Iran conducted in 1988, and for his
role in the bloody crackdowns on dissent that followed protests over the death
of Mahsa Amini, a young woman detained by police over allegedly improperly
wearing the mandatory headscarf, or hijab.
Despite the recent unrest, there was only one reported attack
around the election. Gunmen opened fire on a van transporting ballot boxes in
the restive southeastern province of Sistan and Baluchestan, killing two police
officers and wounding others, the state-run IRNA news agency reported. The
province regularly sees violence between security forces and the militant group
Jaish al-Adl, as well as drug traffickers.

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