Ahmad Salamatian
Ahmad Salamatian | |
---|---|
Member of Parliament of Iran | |
In office 28 May 1980 – 1981 | |
Succeeded by | Mohammad Gharazi |
Constituency | Isfahan |
Majority | 180,584 (55.3%) |
Personal details | |
Born | 1941 Isfahan, Iran |
Political party | Office for the Cooperation of the People with the President |
Other political affiliations | National Front |
Alma mater | University of Paris |
Ahmad Salamatian (Persian: احمد سلامتیان; born 1941, Isfahan[1]) is a former Iranian politician. He "played a prominent part in the revolution against the Shah",[2] co-founding the Committee for the Defense of Freedom and Human Rights in 1977,[1] and was the campaign manager of Abolhassan Banisadr in the 1980 presidential election.[2] He was deputy minister of foreign affairs in 1979,[3] and was elected to the Iranian parliament in February 1980.[4] He had lived in exile in France prior to the 1979 Iranian Revolution (gaining a Master of Advanced Studies in political science from the University of Paris in 1966), and returned there in September 1981 after Banisadr was deposed and assassination attempts were made against him.[1][4][5] He has written for Le Monde Diplomatique.[6]
Salamatian later said, in response to the release of the film Argo, that he had been one of a number of Iranian officials aware of the 6 US hostages hidden in the Canadian embassy, who had kept quiet for fear of the radical hostage-taking groups.[7] In 2010 he co-authored a book on Iran's 2009-10 "Green Revolution".
Electoral history
[edit]Year | Election | Votes | % | Rank | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1980 | Parliament | 181,630 | 55.3 | 4th | Won[8] |
Books
[edit]- (with Sara Daniel) Iran : la révolte verte – La fin de l'islam politique ?, Éditions Delavilla, 2010
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Dominique Lagarde and Delphine Saubaber, L'Express, 6 August 2009, Ahmad Salamatian: "Les Iraniens aspirent à un islam du possible"
- ^ a b The Christian Science Monitor, 9 December 1980, Iran's militant clergy and moderates move to end bitter rivalry
- ^ Harvard Iranian Oral History Project, Salamatian, Ahmad Archived 7 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b House October Surprise Task Force, Joint report, p. 166
- ^ Arte, 2 March 2012, Ahmad Salamatian: Iranische Parlamentswahl ist Inszenierung Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ monde-diplomatique.fr, « Ahmad Salamatian »
- ^ cbc.ca, 19 August 2013, Iran hostage 'Canadian Caper' 1979 rescue no secret to some
- ^ "آخرین نتایج قطعی آراء در شهرستانها" [The latest definite results of elections in provinces] (PDF), Enghelabe Eslami (in Persian), no. 217, p. 11, 17 March 1980 [27 Esfand 1358], archived (PDF) from the original on 29 January 2020 – via iran-archive.com
- 1941 births
- Living people
- Politicians from Isfahan
- People of the Iranian revolution
- University of Paris alumni
- Iranian revolutionaries
- Members of the 1st Islamic Consultative Assembly
- National Front (Iran) student activists
- Office for the Cooperation of the People with the President politicians
- National Council of Resistance of Iran members
- Members of the Iranian Committee for the Defense of Freedom and Human Rights