BFF-40 Iran overturns ban on religious minority councillor

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BFF-40

IRAN-RELIGION-POLITICS

Iran overturns ban on religious minority councillor

TEHRAN, July 21, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Iranian authorities ruled Saturday that a
member of the minority Zoroastrian religion had been wrongly suspended from
his post on a city council.

Sepanta Niknam, a member of Iran’s ancient Zoroastrian religion, was the
only non-Muslim elected to the council in the central city of Yazd in May
2017, but he was suspended later in the year following a complaint by one of
his fellow councillors.

It had followed a ruling by the ultra-conservative head of Iran’s Guardian
Council, which oversees elections, barring religious minorities from standing
in municipal polls.

Because the Guardian Council has power only over national elections, the
ruling was rejected by parliament, but that did not prevent Niknam’s
suspension.

On Saturday, Majid Ansari, a member of the Expediency Council which is
charged with resolving disputes between Iran’s multiple centres of authority,
said they had finally ruled in favour of Niknam.

“Today, the Expediency Council ruled that the 1996 law on religious
minorities is applicable and they can participate in council elections in
their town,” Ansari told the reformist ILNA news agency.

He added that Niknam was now free to retake his post on Yazd city council.

Iran officially recognises “Iranian Zoroastrians, Jews and Christians” as
religious minorities.

The national parliament has several religious minority members, including
three Christians, a Zoroastrian and a Jew among its 290 deputies.

Zoroastrianism was the dominant religion in Persia, prior to the arrival
of Islam, but only counts around 25,000 adherents today, according to
government figures.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 175 hrs