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Iranians Vote To Choose New President

Iranians Vote To Choose New President

Millions of Iranians have gone to the polls to elect a new president, with six candidates aiming to replace Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Iran's Guardian Council had restricted those who could stand in the election, banning women or other candidates with an agenda considered to be reformist or liberal.

There are no political parties in the conventional sense - just a contest between candidates who profess absolute loyalty to the Supreme Leader the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and others who are considered slighting more reformist but by no means moderate.

Mr Ahmadinejad has served two terms and was constitutionally barred from seeking a third.

With long queues forming outside voting stations in the capital, Tehran, and elsewhere, polls were kept open for several extra hours.

By evening, the Interior Ministry said voting had ended across the country.

On the campaign trail, Iran's nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili was seen as one of the front-runners.

He has positioned himself as the most hardline of the candidates but there is speculation he may be viewed by the Supreme Leader as too much of a wild card because of his implacable attitude to the west.

His election would signal a no-change president in Iran's posture to the outside world.

Another favourite is Mohammad Ghalibaf, the current mayor of the capital Tehran, who is a conservative with strong ties to the security forces.

If there is such a thing as a moderate voice amongst the conservative candidates it is Hassan Rouhani, a British-educated cleric.

On the streets of Tehran, people who might count themselves amongst the opposition have been gathering to support him, because in the absence of a more reformist figure he may get their vote.

But whoever wins will have a limited mandate on nuclear policy and relations with the West.

In Iran it is the hard-line supreme leader who has the say, not the president.

The supreme leader spectacularly fell out with Mr Ahmadinejad in spite of backing him in 2009 during elections which critics said were rigged and led to wide-spread protests.

Professor Mohammad Marandi of Tehran University told Sky News that the Ayatollah has not said publicly who he would support.

The professor said the high turnout suggested Iranians attached great importance to the balloting, and said the economy had emerged as the key issue, with candidates focussing "a lot on the economy, jobs and inflation".

"Four years ago, the candidates behaved very aggressively on television and that itself contributed to the tensions, especially in parts of Teheran. This time around the debates … were more civil," he said.

Sky News spoke to a participant in the demonstrations dubbed the Green Revolution.

He did not want to be identified for fear of reprisals but told us he he was held for six months and tortured.

He said: "I was like an empty person, an animal. I was like a piece of meat.

"If there are demonstrations during this election - and I hope there will be - and people take to the streets in Tehran they must stay out day and night.

And if people get killed, injured, arrested and tortured they must persist and stay out on the streets for the government to fall. They cannot go back to the roof tops and just shout slogans."

The country's economy is in its worst state for decades with high inflation, soaring unemployment and negative growth.

The value of Iran's currency, the rial, has more than halved in a year, after a collapse blamed on government mismanagement and sanctions against Iran's energy and banking sectors imposed by the US and EU.

The fall of the rial has led to sharp cuts in imports and raised Iran's inflation to its highest level in 18 years.

(Sky News Foreign Affairs Correspondent Lisa Holland was refused a visa to travel to Iran to cover the election. She compiled this report in London.)