• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

CHRONOLOGY: Political events since Iran's revolution

Sun Mar 9, 2008 7:58pm EDT

(Reuters) - Iranian politicians have begun campaigning ahead of a parliamentary election on Friday that may offer pointers to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's popularity.

World  |  Barack Obama

But voters will be able to choose only among candidates who survived a vetting process that eliminated two-fifths of those who applied, including many leading reformists.

The three main lists comprise conservatives including Ahmadinejad allies, conservatives who broadly oppose the president, and reformists who are his most vocal critics.

The poll will be seen partly as a verdict on Ahmadinejad, who has pursued assertive foreign and nuclear policies while spending Iran's windfall oil earnings freely. But his prospects for re-election next year may depend more on whether he can retain the support of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Here is a chronology of the main political events since the 1979 revolution and the founding of the Islamic Republic.

January 1979 - Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi is forced into exile after mounting discontent with his authoritarian rule.

February - Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini returns to Tehran from Paris after 15 years of exile spent mainly in Iraq and quickly consolidates his power to become Supreme Leader.

June 1989 - Khomeini dies. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei appointed Supreme Leader.

August 1989 - Pragmatic dealmaker Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani becomes president after landslide election win.

May 1997 - Reformist Mohammad Khatami is elected president in landslide over candidate backed by conservative clerics.

July 1999 - Student unrest turns violent over closure of pro-reform newspaper. Dozens of such newspapers are later shut.

February 2000 - Khatami's pro-reform allies sweep to big win in parliamentary election against entrenched conservatives.

June 2001 - Khatami is re-elected president.

August 2002 - Exiled opposition National Council of Resistance of Iran reports existence of uranium enrichment facility at Natanz and heavy water plant at Arak.

February 2004 - Conservatives win parliamentary polls after Guardian Council bars some 2,500 reformers from standing.

June 2005 - In major upset, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, mayor of Tehran, defeats Rafsanjani in run-off vote for presidency.

May 2006 - Washington offers to join multilateral talks with Iran if it verifiably suspends nuclear enrichment.

December 2007 - A U.S. National Intelligence Estimate says Iran put its bid to build a nuclear bomb on hold in 2003.

February 2008 - Hardline state bodies bar hundreds of reformists from running in March 14 parliamentary election.

March 2008 - U.N. Security Council adopts third sanctions resolution targeted at Iran's nuclear programme.



More from Reuters

A security personnel stands guard near oil pipelines at Tawke oil field near Dahuk, 400 km (245 miles) north of Baghdad May 9, 2009. REUTERS/Azad Lashkari

Now or never for Big Oil

The pressure's on for oil giants looking to secure rare access to cheap Middle East reserves as Iraq gears up to auction off some of the world's largest untapped oilfields.  Full Article 

A glass of tap water is served at a restaurant in New York June 10, 2009 REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

G7 glass half empty

Recovering from a punishing global recession has forced the world's richest nations to pay dearly, prompting subdued growth prospects and delayed sighs of relief.   Full Article