Powerful Iranian cleric Shahroudi dies

Grand ayatollah headed Iran's judiciary during fierce crackdowns

FILE-- In this April 22, 2009, file photo, Iran's judiciary chief and current head of Expediency Council Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi attends a conference in Tehran, Iran. Iran's state TV is reporting that Shahroudi, head of the Expediency Council advisory body to the country's Supreme Leader, has died at the age of 70. The Monday, Dec. 24, 2018, report said Shahroudi was long sick and hospitalized in north Tehran. Reportedly, he was suffering from gastrointestinal cancer. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi, File)
Powered by automated translation

Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, a grand ayatollah who headed Iran's judiciary during fierce crackdowns on dissidents, journalists and activists, died on Monday at the age of 70 according to the state news agency Irna.

Mr Shahroudi was a student of Iran's revolutionary founder Ruhollah Khomeini who went on to hold some of the country's most powerful positions.

At the time of his death he was head of the Expediency Council and a member of the 12-man Guardian Council – two important institutions for shaping legislation and vetting election candidates.

He was also deputy head of the Assembly of Experts which has the power to choose the successor to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei – a position to which Mr Shahroudi himself was occasionally linked.

Mr Shahroudi had not been seen in public for several months, and there were reports last year that he had surgery for an unspecified cancer in Germany.

A German MP filed a complaint against Mr Shahroudi during his stay, calling for him to be charged with crimes against humanity, but a judge found no grounds to hold him.

Mr Shahroudi headed the judiciary between 1999 and 2009 – a period that saw hundreds of executions and a crackdown on activists, dissidents and the reformist media.

_______________

Read more:

Saudi Arabia praises Albania's expulsion of Iranian diplomats

Australian population specialist arrested by Iran for spying

Egypt's Sisi says army will defend Gulf, after Iranian cleric threatens Saudi Arabia

_______________

His tenure concluded with the mass protests over allegations of vote rigging in the 2009 presidential election, which led to thousands of people being arrested and allegations of severe abuse in prisons.

Some other measures marked him as a relative moderate within the judiciary, particularly his moratorium on stoning as a method of execution which other clerics saw as permissible under Sharia.

But the prosecution in 2001 of reformist MPs – despite their parliamentary immunity – was heavily criticised by the government of the time.

Mr Shahroudi was born in Najaf in Iraq on August 18, 1948, and met Khomeini when the latter was exiled to Iraq in the 1960s.

He fled to Kuwait and then Iran after Saddam Hussein cracked down on Shiite clerics after the 1979 Iranian revolution, the conservative Tasnim news agency said in its obituary.