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| religion = [[Twelver]] [[Shi'a]] [[Islam]]
| religion = [[Twelver]] [[Shi'a]] [[Islam]]
| nationality = [[Iranian peoples|Iranian]]
| nationality = [[Iranian peoples|Iranian]]

Revision as of 18:29, 1 September 2010

Sadeq Larijani
Chief Justice of Iran
Assumed office
30 June 2009
Appointed byAli Khamenei
Preceded byMahmoud Shahroudi
Member of Assembly of Experts
Assumed office
15 December 1998
ConstituencyMazandaran
Personal details
Bornآیت الله صادق اردشیر لاریجانی
(1960-03-12) 12 March 1960 (age 64)
Najaf, Iraq
Diedآیت الله صادق اردشیر لاریجانی
Resting placeآیت الله صادق اردشیر لاریجانی
NationalityIranian
Political partyIndependent
Parent
  • آیت الله صادق اردشیر لاریجانی

Ayatollah Sadegh Ardeshir Larijani (Persian: صادق اردشیر لاریجانی; born 12 March 1960, Najaf, Iraq) is an Iraqi-born Iranian hard-line cleric, politician and current head of the judicial system of Iran.

Larijani served as one of the 12 members of the Guardian Council of the Islamic Republic of Iran for eight years.[1] Described as "relatively junior"[1] or "inexperienced cleric" with "close ties to Iran's military and intelligence agencies"[2], he was appointed head of the judicial system of Iran by supreme leader Ali Khamenei on August 15, 2009.[3] Larijani condemned protesters and those who expressed doubts in the 2009 presidential election results, calling the protests as "illegal" and any doubts "baseless".[4]

Early life and family

He is the son of Ayatollah Hashem Amoli and the brother of Ali Larijani, the speaker of the Iranian parliament.

Scholarship

According to leading Iranian human rights defense lawyer[5] Mohammad Seifzadeh, the head of the Judicial System of Iran is required to be a Mojtahed with significant experience in the field. Larijani, however, was neither an experienced jurist nor a highly ranked cleric and carried the title of "Hojjat-ol Eslam" up to a few months before his appointment to the post.[6]

Views

Sadegh Larijani has stated that the government does not derive its legitimacy from the votes of the nation.[7]

He is a well-known critic of ex-president Mohammad Khatami and his reforms. In March 1998 an article by him attacking Khatami's call for a civil Islamic society and Abdolkarim Soroush's philosophy was published in Sobh newspaper.[8]

Larijani proclaimed:

"We support a society which is based on the spirit of Islam and religious faith, in which Islamic and religious values are propagated, in which every Koranic injunction and the teachings of the Prophet of Islam and the Imams are implemented. It will be a society in which the feeling of servitude to God Almighty will be manifest everywhere, and in which people will not demand their rights from God but are conscious of their obligations to God." [9]

He also criticizes the views of people — such as Abdolkarim Soroush — who say that while there is a society, or civilization, of Muslims, there is no such thing as an Islamic society or civilization, and that Islam is a spiritual and individual way of life, not an ideology.[10]

Judiciary System

  • Shortly after his appointment, he appointed Saeed Mortazavi to the post of deputy prosecutor general of Iran. Mortazavi was prosecutor general of Tehran for more than seven years during which he was involved in murdering and torturing a number of Iranian civilians and activists. One of the high-profile deaths attributed to Mortazavi is that of Canadian-Iranian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi.
  • On September 7, 2009 Iranian police with a permission from Judiciary system and Tehran General Court unexpectedly entered the office for support of political prisoners and seized all the documents, computers among others. The police refused to give a receipt of the items. The office was organized by Mehdi Karroubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi for supporting the victims of torture in Iranian prisons.[11]
  • In September 2009, the authorities from the Judiciary System began targeting the children of leaders of the opposition groups. For instance, Atefeh Emam, the daughter of jailed activist Javad Emam, the Chief of Staff of Mousavi's campaign, has been imprisoned and is being pressured to make a "confession" in order to implicate her father. Iranian Judiciary arrested the 18 years old girl and released her after a few days in South of Tehran in an inappropriate condition.[12]
  • On September 8, 2009, Iranian Judiciary, unexpectedly closed and sealed the office of National Confidence Party and arrested Morteza Alviri and Alireza Beheshti and several of the closest allies of opposition leaders Mehdi Karroubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi.[13][14]

References

See also

Legal offices
Preceded by Head of judiciary of Islamic Republic of Iran
2009-present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Order of precedence
Preceded byas Speaker of the Parliament of Iran order of precedence of Iran
as Chief Justice of Iran
Succeeded byas Secretary of the Guardian Council of Iran