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Topic: Mohammad Moin


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In the News (Thu 24 Dec 09)

  
 About IPIDR
Zahra Pourpak, Laleh Khodadadi, Fatemeh Fattahi, Mostafa Moin, Abolhassan Farhoudi, Masoud Movahedi, Mohammad Gharagozlou, Mohammad Hassan Bemanian, Mohammad Reza Fazlollahi, Marzieh Heidarzadeh, Lida Atarod, and Mahboubeh Mansouri.
Anna Isaian, Abolhassan Farhoudi, Mostafa Moin, Zahra Pourpak, Asghar Aghamohammadi, Masoud Movahedi, Mohammad Gharagozlou, and Bahram MirSaeid Ghazi.
Mohammad Gharagozlou, Farzad Ebrahimi, Abolhassan Farhoudi, Asghar Aghamohammadi, Mohammad Hassan Bemanian, Zahra Chavoshzadeh, Marzieh Heidarzadeh, Mehrzad Mehdizadeh, Mostafa Moin, Masoud Movahedi, Mohammad Nabavi, Zahra Pourpak, and Nima Rezaei.
www.iaari.hbi.ir /IPIDR/Abstracts.htm

  
 news.asp?id=47885
Mohammad Ali Abtahi, a former vice president and supporter of the Moin campaign, said he thought the hardline camp's chances appeared to have been damaged by competition between the three right-wing candidates.
Former higher education minister Moin -- initially disqualified from standing -- has been hoping for an upset similar to outgoing President Mohammad Khatami's spectacular 1997 landslide win, and his campaign has been directed at convincing sceptical supporters not to boycott.
Speaking after polls closed shortly before midnight Friday, he also said that he believed that "for the moment, Moin is in front" of Rafsanjani, a pragmatic conservative.
www.turkishpress.com /news.asp?id=47885

  
 Middle East Online
Opinion polls show Rafsanjani is facing a twin challenge from Mostafa Moin, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf.
Informal opinion polls show the former president, once considered a racing certainty to sweep home in Friday's vote, is facing a twin challenge from hardliner Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf and reformer Mostafa Moin.
Supporters of Moin have been expressing confidence that their man could spring such a surprise, despite calls from some liberals to boycott the vote and the disappointment over the unfulfilled promises of Khatami's difficult presidency.
www.middle-east-online.com /english/?id=13760

  
 Iran Focus-Iran elections candidates: Mostafa Moin - Iran (General) - News
Moin announced that he would choose Mohammad Reza Khatami as his First Vice President if he were elected.
Moin has had a hard time convincing former reformist voters to give him another chance after eight frustrating years for incumbent President Mohammad Khatami.
Moin served as the Culture and Higher Education Minister from 1989 to 1993 and served as Higher Education Minister from 1997 to 2003.
www.iranfocus.com /modules/news/article.php?storyid=2388   (295 words)

  
 Reformist candidate Moin abandon doubts to run as president - Irna
Moin has introduced the head of the Islamic Iran Participation Front (IIPF), Mohammad Reza Khatami, as his running mate and promised to establish a deputy presidential post for the human rights affairs.
Moin urged Iranians to repeat the May 23, 1997 epic in which more than 20 million voters turned out to give President Mohammad Khatami a resounding landslide.
Moin pledged to 'take measures against the wholesale suspension of the press, the continued detention of political activists, the detention of webloggers and other press activists' if elected.
www.irna.ir /en/news/view/line-22/0505281388223807.htm   (1148 words)

  
 news.asp?id=47885
Mohammad Ali Abtahi, a former vice president and supporter of the Moin campaign, said he thought the hardline camp's chances appeared to have been damaged by competition between the three right-wing candidates.
Former higher education minister Moin -- initially disqualified from standing -- has been hoping for an upset similar to outgoing President Mohammad Khatami's spectacular 1997 landslide win, and his campaign has been directed at convincing sceptical supporters not to boycott.
Moin is the main reformist candidate, but another reformer who could score is former parliament speaker Mehdi Karoubi -- who has promised to give all Iranians monthly 500,000 rial (55 dollar) handouts.
www.turkishpress.com /news.asp?id=47885   (1148 words)

  
 Ananova - LIVE: Pakistan v India (5th ODI)
Pakistan: Taufeeq Umar, Yasir Hameed, Yousuf Youhana, Inzamam-ul-Haq (capt), Younis Khan, Abdul Razzaq, Moin Khan (wkt), Shoaib Malik, Shoaib Akhtar, Mohammad Sami, Shabbir Ahmed.
Shoaib Malik and Moin Khan are running well between the wickets as they try to put pressure on the India fielders.
Shoaib is finding a few gaps now but India are still in control.
www.ananova.com /sport/story/sm_900318.html   (1148 words)

  
 Run-off likely in close Iran presidential election
Rafsanjani's closest rivals are outspoken reformist Mostafa Moin, 54, a former higher education minister under outgoing President Mohammad Khatami, and former police chief Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, a conservative who is running as an independent.
Atrianfar said the Rafsanjani camp would prefer a run-off against Qalibaf, rather than Moin who draws support from many of the same voters eager to see Iran's isolation from the West lifted, the economy liberalized and social restrictions eased.
Rafsanjani aide Mohammad Atrianfar, publisher of the liberal Shargh newspaper, said the former president can count on about 35 to 40 percent of votes in Friday's election.
www.ezilon.com /information/printer_5655.shtml   (1148 words)

  
 Editor: Myself (English): weblog Archives
Mostafa Tajzadeh, Mohsen Aminzadeh, Mohammad Ali Abtahi, Hadi Khaniki, Feyzollah Arabsorkhi and Issa Saharkhiz were among the hosts.
Derakhshan, who supported reformist candidate Mostafa Moin in the initial round of voting, has switched to "the enemy camp," as he calls it, to back Rafsanjani.
A day before last week's election, Derakhshan visited Moin's headquarters and for the first time met some of the leading reform strategists, many of whom had been following his blog.
hoder.com /weblog/archives/cat_weblog.shtml   (1148 words)

  
 Khaleej Times Online
The polls suggest Moin has so far failed to capture the imagination of the electorate, having been disqualified from the race by the unelected, hardline Guardians Council, and then permitted to run after all.
TEHERAN — Iran’s main reformist party is hoping its presidential candidate, Mostafa Moin, can force a second-round run-off vote and go on to score a shock win against pragmatic conservative cleric Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.
The head of Iran’s main reformist party, Mohammad Reza Khatami, said the Islamic Iran Participation Front (IIPF) was campaigning hard ahead of the June 17 election in order to eat into the lead of Rafsanjani.
www.khaleejtimes.com /DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/middleeast/2005/June/middleeast_June174.xml§ion=middleeast&col=class=stories   (1148 words)

  
 106.2 HUM FM
Pakistan: Inzamam-ul-Haq (captain), Imran Farhat, Yasir Hameed, Salim Elahi, Yousuf Youhana, Shoaib Malik, Abdul Razzaq, Moin Khan, Azhar Mahmood, Shoaib Akhtar, Mohammad Sami.
With his side in disarray on 87-9, Shoaib Akhtar decided to throw the bat, smashing five boundaries in making 27 off 28 balls but he was left high and dry when Mohammad Sami was caught by Hamish Marshall off Daniel Vettori.
Marshall did not last long, facing only six balls before he was stumped by Moin off Shoaib Malik for two.
www.humfm.com /sportsdetails.asp?id=2289   (1148 words)

  
 Pakistan Times Sports: Cricket Team reaches SL as Wright terms Pakistan 'real threat'
Squad: Inzamam-ul-Haq (captain), Yousuf Youhana, Imran Farhat, Yasir Hameed, Imran Nazir, Younis Khan, Moin Khan, Abdul Razzaq, Shoaib Malik, Rana Naveed-ul-Hasan, Mohammad Sami, Shoaib Akhtar, Shabbir Ahmed, Danish Kaneria.
Vice captain Yousuf Youhana, Younis Khan, skipper Inzamam-ul-Haq and wicketkeeper-batsman Moin Khan form a strong middle-order batting lineup while the paceman Shabbir Ahmed and Mohammad Sami will supplement Akhtar in the pace department.
The main attraction in the Pakistani team was fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar, whose coming to Sri Lanka was not certain.
pakistantimes.net /2004/07/14/sports2.htm   (1148 words)

  
 Iran Daily
Moin has introduced Secretary-General of Islamic Iran Participation Front Mohammad Reza Khatami as his running mate (vice president) and promised to install the post of vice president for human rights affairs.
Mohammad Javad Zarif, Iran’s ambassador to the UN, said the United States never intended to scrap its nuclear arsenal, despite promising to eventually disarm when it signed the 1970 nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, the landmark arms control pact.
In a meeting with Iran’s ambassador and permanent envoy to the UN and its specialized agencies in Vienna, Mohammad Mehdi Akhoundzadeh, before he assumes his new assignment, Khatami said Iran’s activities in the field of nuclear energy are peaceful and free from any ambiguity.
www.iran-daily.com /1384/2286/html   (1148 words)

  
 Tehran's reformists begin battle to retain presidency
Moin quit the cabinet of President Khatami in 2003 over frustration with the Guardians Council, while Mohammad Reza Khatami was among the thousands of candidates barred from standing in the Majlis elections.
At Tuesday's gathering, the IIPF presented Moin as its candidate and Mohammad Reza Khatami as his running mate.
President Khatami has served two consecutive terms as president and is barred by the constitution from standing again.
www.benadorassociates.com /pf.php?id=11941   (598 words)

  
 CBC News: Runoff likely in Iran vote
Second place is expected to be a contest between former culture minister Mostafa Moin, the leading reformist candidate, and former police chief Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, 44, the conservative candidate.
If either does end up winning, he would become the first non-cleric president since Mohammad Ali Rajai was assassinated in 1981.
Many are disillusioned and upset that outgoing President Mohammad Khatami failed to bring about enough reforms.
www.cbc.ca /story/world/national/2005/06/17/iran-election050617.html?ref=rss   (431 words)

  
 Middle East Report Online, Iran's Presidential Runoff: The Long View by Kaveh Ehsani, June 24, 2005
The last polls before the June 17 round showed the most reformist-identified candidate, Mostafa Moin, running neck and neck with Mohammad Baqir Qalibaf for second place to Rafsanjani.
Moin's campaign pledged to continue political liberalization and economic reforms, to struggle to free political prisoners and protect the press and civil society groups, and to defuse tensions with the United States over Iran's nuclear program.
Moin's candidacy marked the first time that the lay reformers who compose his party had put forward a non-cleric as their candidate.
www.merip.org /mero/mero062405.html   (2734 words)

  
 Challenging the Mullahs - Newsweek World News - MSNBC.com
If Moin wins—a long shot at the moment—he'll inherit a problem that Mohammad Khatami never solved.
This bad: their chief candidate in this Friday's presidential election is Mostafa Moin, 54, a mild-mannered pediatrician who is widely regarded as a seriously dull speechmaker.
Where Khatami was elected in 1997 by a 69.1 percent landslide, and re-elected four years later in a 76.9 percent blowout, pollsters say Moin has been running a dismal third in an eight-man race.
www.msnbc.msn.com /id/8185331/site/newsweek   (484 words)

  
 Iran's Science Minister Mostafa Moin submits his resignation
Minister of Science, Research and Technology Mostafa Moin handed over his resignation to President Mohammad Khatami on Thursday but the president gave no response to the resignation request, she said.
It is believed that Moin's resignation was mainly due to the Guardian Council's rejection of a bill that he put forward to restructure his ministry.
Director General of the Public Relations Department of the ministry Mahdokht Boroujerdi on Monday confirmed earlier reports on Moin's resignation.
www.payvand.com /news/03/jul/1187.html   (179 words)

  
 The Daily Star - Politics - Iran U-turn allows reformists to run
Mustafa Moin was the candidate chosen by the main reformist party, the Islamic Iran Participation Front, and is seen as the only credible pro-reform figure trying to run for president on June 17.
Witnesses said some 300 students left their dormitories to take part in a protest march, shouting slogans against the blocking of Moin's candidacy, but they were stopped by police without incident.
Rafsanjani has been promoting himself as a moderate and had been seen as the front-runner, although the scandal surrounding the initial blocking of Moin may now give the reformists a boost.
www.dailystar.com.lb /article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=2&article_id=15375   (907 words)

  
 Mostafa Moeen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mostafa Moeen, M.D. (مصطفی معین; born April 1, 1951), also spelled Moin, is an Iranian politician and professor, currently an Advisor to the President Mohammad Khatami.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mostafa_Moin   (907 words)

  
 Mostafa Moin biography .ms
Mostafa Moin (مصطفی معین; born March 31, 1951 in Najaf Abad), is an Iranian politician, currently an Advisor to the President of Iran.
Moin is considered the choice of Islamic Iran Participation Front as their candidate for Iranian presidential election, 2005.
As the Minister of Science, Research, and Technology, Moin resigned two times, first after the student protests of July, 1999, and then in July, 2003 after he wasn't able to get the Council of Guardians pass laws for changing the direction of his ministry towards more "scientific productivity".
mostafa-moin.biography.ms   (907 words)

  
 Moin Khan to Pakistan's rescue
Moin's century came off just 129 balls and when he was eighth out for 137, his highest Test score, he had faced 174 balls and hit 20 fours and two sixes.
Moin Khan led a spirited Pakistan recovery to avert the follow-on in the first Test against New Zealand on Monday.
Moin came to wicket at the fall of Inzamam-ul-Haq for 51, with 108 runs still needed to avoid the follow-on.
www.rediff.com /cricket/2003/dec/22pak.htm   (364 words)

  
 REPORTS OF ATROCITIES UPON MQM WORKERS AND SUPPORTERS BY THE GOVERNMENT OF NAWAZ SHARIF
Moin 30, son of Mohammad Younus is a worker of MQM Unit 57, P.I.B Sector, Karachi.
Imran Qureshi 26, son of Niaz Qureshi is the resident of 36-G, Sharif Colony, Landhi, Karachi.
Abdul Hammed Sheikh 31, son of Abdul Aziz is a worker of MQM Unit 186, Pak Colony Sector, Karachi.
www.mqm.com /English-News/Apr-1999/news-1999-04-21a.htm   (364 words)

  
 Wampum: Return of the ... One True King (XIII)
Moin was the Minister of Culture and Higher Education under President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani (1989-1993) and President Mohammad Khatami (1997-2000) and later the Minister of Science, Research, and Technology (the same post, with a changed name) under President Khatami (2000-2003).
Moin was elected as representative of Shiraz in mid-term elections of first Majlis in 1982.
Moin's announcement mentioned corruption of the Pahlavi regime in a generational context (he was born in 1951) so he is running as a Revolutionary, and he criticized the oil dependence of the economy and the current economic planning (see drat!
wampum.wabanaki.net /archives/001548.html   (364 words)

  
 USATODAY.com - Iranian hard-liners bar reform candidates from election
Moin was the only hopeful who supported continued suspension of all uranium enrichment-related activities by Iran to avoid a nuclear crisis and reach a political compromise with the Europeans.
Former Culture Minister Mostafa Moin, who was the sole candidate of Iran's largest reformist party, the Islamic Iran Participation Front, was among those disqualified.
Saeed Leylaz, a political analyst, suggested hard-liners were hoping to avoid a candidate, like Moin, who has the support of young people.
www.usatoday.com /news/world/2005-05-22-iran-elections_x.htm   (364 words)

  
 Reformist candidate Moin abandon doubts to run as president - Irna
Moin urged Iranians to repeat the May 23, 1997 epic in which more than 20 million voters turned out to give President Mohammad Khatami a resounding landslide.
Former minister Mostafa Moin announced Saturday that he had overcome his 'heavy doubts' to run at the June 17 presidential election, pledging to take up the reform mantle and challenge the 'unconstitutional' powers of the Guardian Council.
Moin pledged to 'take measures against the wholesale suspension of the press, the continued detention of political activists, the detention of webloggers and other press activists' if elected.
www.irna.ir /en/news/view/line-17/0505281381222719.htm   (364 words)

  
 Iran's Science Minister Mostafa Moin submits his resignation
Minister of Science, Research and Technology Mostafa Moin handed over his resignation to President Mohammad Khatami on Thursday but the president gave no response to the resignation request, she said.
It is believed that Moin's resignation was mainly due to the Guardian Council's rejection of a bill that he put forward to restructure his ministry.
Director General of the Public Relations Department of the ministry Mahdokht Boroujerdi on Monday confirmed earlier reports on Moin's resignation.
www.payvand.com /news/03/jul/1187.html   (364 words)

  
 Iran Focus-News - Iran (General) - Iran presidential candidate hints at bombings being “insider job”
Mostafa Moin, a former Minister of Education under incumbent President Mohammad Khatami, said the authorities had to “discover the relationship between the bombings and the elections”.
Moin’s comments added fuel to speculation that the bombings in Tehran, Ahwaz and Zahedan could be the work of elements within the ruling theocracy.
In a rare departure from the official terminology for the MeK, Moin did not refer to the group as “hypocrites”, but used the name the group itself uses.
www.iranfocus.com /modules/news/article.php?storyid=2408   (364 words)

  
 KeepMedia Newsweek: Challenging the Mullahs
If Moin wins--a long shot at the moment--he'll inherit a problem that Mohammad Khatami never solved.
This bad: their chief candidate in this Friday's presidential election is Mostafa Moin, 54, a mild-mannered pediatrician who is widely regarded as a seriously dull speechmaker.
Where Khatami was elected in 1997 by a 69.1 percent landslide, and re-elected four years later in a 76.9 percent blowout, pollsters say Moin has been running a dismal third in an eight-man race.
keepmedia.com /pubs/Newsweek/2005/06/20/894891?extID=10032&oliID=213   (364 words)

  
 Iran Focus-News - Iran (General) - Iran elections candidates: Mostafa Moin
Moin announced that he would choose Mohammad Reza Khatami as his First Vice President if he were elected.
Moin served as the Culture and Higher Education Minister from 1989 to 1993 and served as Higher Education Minister from 1997 to 2003.
Moin was a Majlis (parliament) deputy from 1982 to 1984, and again from 1988 to 1989.
www.iranfocus.com /modules/news/article.php?storyid=2388   (364 words)

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