۱۳۹۵ آذر ۲۱, یکشنبه

Iran: Fears of Deep Divide Among Regime's Factions




NCRI - The Iranian regime’s prosecutor general fearing deep factional divide warned about disclosure of the factional feuding particularly among the regime’s leaders and said: “We should resolve the intra-family issues within ourselves and not allow the enemy to poison (create) the atmosphere and infiltrate through a series of gaps and pores.”
Jafar Montazeri who was speaking in the province of Kermanshah on Thursday December 8 added: “There are defects, problems, weaknesses and sometimes betrayal within the system, but they should never deter us away from the clear direction that we have taken.”
“Disagreement among the authorities at the normal and usual level is no problem, but it is important not to let these differences turn into gaps. The enemy is trying to create a deep divide through the normal differences…,” Montazeri continued.
He then defended the head of Judiciary and his bank accounts and said: “There are strange attacks against the Judiciary in the social media, websites, networks and other places and even in the House (Parliament’s) podium. Dear brother who criticizes (the Judiciary), when you see the enemy is sitting behind trenches and points his Tank tubes, missiles and weapons at the heart of Judiciary, is it logical to go along with our enemy.”
The regime’s prosecutor general then attacked Mahmoud Sadeghi, a member of the regime’s parliament from Tehran who called for publishing report on bank accounts of mullah Sadegh Larijani (Head of Judiciary). Montazeri said: “Is it in favor of the system, country and revolution to take away people's trust and confidence in our Judiciary?”
Mahmoud Sadeghi, member of the regime’s parliament, has announced that he has filed a complaint in the Special Clerical Court on Tuesday against the head of Judiciary, Sadegh Larijani.
He once again in a speech in Shiraz put his finger on 63 bank accounts of the head of Judiciary and said: “Under the constitution, it would be illegal if you open a deposit account even if it is not personal account. The circulation (money flow) of these accounts under the constitution must be reported to the (Supreme) Audit Court and become public