Mohsen Hashemi Rafsanjani Explained

Mohsen Hashemi Rafsanjani
Birth Name:Mohsen Hashemi Bahramani
Order:Chairman of the City Council of Tehran
Term Start:23 August 2017
Term End:4 August 2021
Deputy:Ebrahim Amini
Predecessor:Mehdi Chamran
Successor:Mehdi Chamran
Order1:Member of the City Council of Tehran
Term Start1:23 August 2017
Term End1:4 August 2021
Majority1:1,756,086
Office2:Head of President's Office
Term Start2:8 June 1996
Term End2:10 August 1997
President2:Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani
Predecessor2:Hossein Marashi
Successor2:Mohammad-Ali Abtahi
Birth Date:24 October 1961
Birth Place:Qom, Imperial State of Iran
Residence:Tehran, Iran
Alma Mater:Polytechnique Montréal
Spouse:Azam Hashempour[1]
Children:3
Party:Executives of Construction Party

Mohsen Hashemi Rafsanjani (Persian: محسن هاشمی رفسنجانی, born 24 October 1961) is an Iranian politician, academic and engineer who served as a member and was chairman of the City Council of Tehran from 2017 to 2021. He was the deputy director of Iran's Islamic Azad University from 2013 until 2017 and chairman and CEO of Tehran Metro for 13 years. He was the main reformist member candidate for the fourth period of the Tehran city council in 2013 as Tehran Mayor, but lost to Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf. In 2017, he was elected as a city councilor and later was elected as chairman of the council.

Early life

Mohsen Hashemi Rafsanjani was born on (24 October 1961 in Qom, Iran. He is the eldest son of Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, the fourth president of Iran, and his wife, Effat Marashi. He has two sisters, Fatemeh and Faezeh. He also has two younger brothers, Mehdi and Yasser.

During his childhood, his family was pursued by the SAVAK. At age three, Rafsanjani's father was jailed by the SAVAK. His father moved the family from Qom to Tehran to escape persecution. Rafsanjani studied at Islamic schools in Tehran, such as Alavi and Valyasr.

Rafsanjani's father was jailed for three years before the Iranian Revolution. During that time, Rafsanjani was the head of the house. He became active in cultural school activities and responsibilities in the bazaar Tajrish mosque library, where he read books. During the Iranian Revolution, seventeen-year-old Rafsanjani was active alongside the revolutionaries.

In 1987, Rafsanjani earned a master of applied science (MASc) degree in mechanical engineering from the Polytechnique Montréal.[2]

Career

Rafsanjani served the defense industry until the UN resolution was executed and prisoners of war with Iraq were freed. While a member of the defense industry, he worked on producing Sejjil and Shahab missiles.

During his father's time as president of Iran, Rafsanjani established the Office of Special Investigation of the President to help identify problems and shortcomings. While in this position, Rafsanjani and his colleagues produced nearly 500 effective reports on production, exports, projects, government bureaucracy, and economic problems. Rafsanjani also held the position of the president's Chief of Staff.

Tehran Metro

See main article: Tehran Metro. Rafsanjani was the CEO of Tehran Metro for thirteen years, from 1998 until March 2011. The Tehran metro was built during his tenure. He was elected as chairman and director of Tehran Metro by Abdollah Nouri, the Interior Minister of Mohammad Khatami. While CEO of Tehran Metro, Rafsanjani separated oversight of the metro from the Interior Ministry and transferred it to Tehran municipality. He used foreign credit to help complete the metro line. When the existing Metro cars were not large enough to carry all people who wanted to use the metro, Rafsanjani used internal and external capital and established a unit that could make new cars.

Rafsanjani resigned from his position as CEO twice. The first time was in 2003, when Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was mayor of Tehran.[3] Ahmadinejad did not accept the resignation, and Rafsanjani later reclaimed his post. In March 2011 he resigned again. This time, the mayor of Tehran (Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf) accepted his resignation but asked that Rafsanjani continues as the mayor's senior adviser as well as a member of the city board.

Mayoral candidacy

After he resigned from Tehran Metro, Rafsanjani joined the Tehran city council. At the start of the fourth period of the Tehran city council, Rafsanjani was one of the most serious reformist options. As a moderate member of the city council, he stood a good chance to become mayor of Tehran; his close competition was with Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the acting mayor of Tehran at the time.

After the first election in August, Rafsanjani and Ghalibaf had 15 votes each and one vote was white. On the second round of voting, Ghalibaf received 16 votes, while Rafsanjani received 14, with the last vote being white.

Appointment as Azad University VP

In October 2013, by decree of Hamid Mirzadeh, the head of the Islamic Azad University of Iran, Rafsanjani was appointed as the construction assistant director of the Islamic Azad University.

Other pursuits

During the presidency of Hassan Rouhani, Rafsanjani was appointed as a member of the board of directors of the Special Company for Rail Transportation of Iran.

Rafsanjani manages a publishing institute called Nashre Maaref Enghelab, which publishes his and his family's writings.

Rafsanjani is the Union Chairman of Urban Railroad Transportation of Iran. He is the chairman of Iran's Board of Transportation engineering and serves as a member of the Welfare Foundation on behalf of his father.

Rafsanjani is the vice president of the International Union of Public Transport of the Middle East and North Africa. In the past years, he has held various positions, such as chief of staff of the State Expediency Council, head of the president's Special Investigation Office, and board member of the defense industry.

Electoral history

Year Election Votes % Rank Notes
2017City Council of Tehran1,756,0861st
2021President

Notes and References

  1. News: عکس: شجره نامه هاشمی رفسنجانی. 2016.
  2. Book: WorldCat Thesis ID. WorldCat. 20525295.
  3. Web site: Dehghan. Saeed Kamali. Rafsanjani under pressure after children are jailed. The Guardian. May 25, 2014.