Iran’s Khamenei warns of Western ‘schemes’ as new lawmakers meet

A handout picture released on May 26, 2016 by the official website of The Center for Preserving and Publishing the Works of Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, shows him (R) giving one of his rings to Ali Badreddine the son of Mustafa Badreddine, a top Hezbollah commander who was killed in an attack in Syria, as he meets with members of the Badreddine family in Tehran. Hezbollah has accused Islamist extremists of killing Badreddine, but did not name any single group. Badreddine's death has raised many questions, namely because the area where he was killed is technically under the control of the Syrian army while Hezbollah and Iranian fighters are also present there.  / AFP PHOTO / KHAMENEI.IR / HO / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / KHAMENEI.IR" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

 

Tehran /AFP

Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei urged newly-elected lawmakers on Saturday to resist “schemes” from the West as parliamentarians met in Tehran for the first time since elections finished in April.
“The turbulent state of the region and the world and the international adventurism of oppressors and their vassals have confronted the Islamic Iran with conditions more complicated than before,” said a message from Khamenei, read to a packed parliament chamber.
Khamenei, who has the final say on all matters in the country, repeated his familiar call for loyalty to the principles of the 1979 revolution and resistance against Western infiltration.
“It is the revolutionary and legal duty of you to make the parliament a stronghold against the schemes, charms and impudently excessive demands of the Arrogance,” his message read.
“Arrogance” was a term first used by the Islamic republic’s founder Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to describe Western powers, especially the United States.
The 290-member parliament was inaugurated in the presence of 265 members, with three seats vacant after votes for two MPs were nullified by Iran’s constitutional oversight body, the Guardian Council, and a third member died in a car accident.
Elections for the key position of house speaker and the presiding board are expected on Sunday or Monday.
Only after the position is filled will be clear whether Iran’s conservatives or the moderate-reformist allies of President Hassan Rouhani have a working majority. According to an AFP count, no single party won an overall majority in elections that saw Rouhani make huge gains.
Reformists took 133 of the 290 seats, short of a majority but ahead of conservatives, who took 125 seats.
The role of the independent members will be critical in the balance of parliament’s partisan powers.

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