- Mohammad-Ali Rajai
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Mohammad-Ali Rajai 2nd President of Iran In office
2 August 1981 – 30 August 1981Prime Minister Mohammad-Javad Bahonar Preceded by Abulhassan Banisadr Succeeded by Ali Khamenei 76th Prime Minister of Iran
2nd Prime Minister of the Islamic RepublicIn office
12 August 1980 – 4 August 1981President Abolhassan Banisadr Preceded by Mehdi Bazargan Succeeded by Mohammad Javad Bahonar 7th Minister of Foreign Affairs In office
11 March 1981 – 15 August 1981President Abolhassan Banisadr Prime Minister Himself Preceded by Karim Khodapanahi Succeeded by Mir-Hossein Mousavi Personal details Born 15 June 1933
Ghazvin, Pahlavi dynastyDied 30 August 1981 (aged 48)
Tehran, IranPolitical party Islamic Republic Party Spouse(s) Ateghe Sediqi (1958–1981) Religion Usuli Twelver Shia Muslim Mohammad Ali Rajai (Persian: محمدعلی رجایی) was the second elected President of Iran from 2 to 30 August 1981, after serving as Prime Minister under Abolhassan Banisadr. He was also Minister of Foreign Affairs from 11 March 1981 to 15 August 1981, while he was Prime Minister. He was assassinated in a bombing on 30 August 1981, along with prime minister Mohammad Javad Bahonar.
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Early life and career
Mohammad-Ali Rajai was born on 15 June 1933 in Qazvin, Iran. His father, Abdulsamad, died when Mohammad-Ali was only 4 years old, after which he lived with his mother and brother. Rajai grew up in Qazvin, and moved to Tehran in 1946. After moving to Tehran, he had a close relationship with the anti-Shah groups and parties. He known with Ayatollah Mahmoud Taleghani. In 1958, He moved to Bijar for a short period, but after a year, he moved back to Tehran and graduated with a degree in Education from Tarbiat Moallem University in 1959.[1] He was arrested by the Shah's government in May 1974, but was set free after four years.
He was actively involved in the Iranian Revolution and was a leader in the movement to purge Iranian universities of American and European influences, which was later called the Cultural Revolution.
Ministerial posts
After the Iranian Revolution, he became Minister of Education in the government of Mehdi Bazargan, and although Bazargan's Cabinet resigned in 6 November 1979, Rajai did not resign and remained a minister until 12 August 1980, when he became prime minister. When Bani Sadr became the president of Iran in the first presidential election, he had to nominate a new prime minister, and after 5 months, he nominated Rajai for the position, and parliament voted him in. He appointed Khodapanahi as Foreign Minister, Mohammad-Reza Mahdavi Kani as Interior Minister and Javad Fakori as Defence Minister. During his prime ministership, Iran-Iraq War was started and his government's first policy became the "victory and defense". He was in office until 2 August 1981, when he became the second president of Iran.
Presidency
Banisadr was impeached on 22 June 1981 by parliament, and Khomeini held a Provisional Presidential Council by 6 people headed by Mohammad Beheshti and later Abdul-Karim Mousavi Ardebili. Rajai was one of the members of that Council. He nominated himself for the presidential election in 1981. He became the second president and the first president from the Islamic Republican Party after winning 91% of the votes. He officially became the president after Oath of Office in 2 August 1981.[1] He named Mohammad-Javad Bahonar to the Parliament to become the next prime minister. Parliament voted in to Bahonar and he formed a new government.
Assassination
On 30 August 1981, President Rajai held a meeting of Iran's Supreme Defense Council, along with the Prime Minister Mohammad Javad Bahonar. Witnesses later stated that a trusted aide brought a briefcase into the conference room, set it between the two leaders, and then left. Another person opened the case, triggering a bomb that set the room ablaze and killed Rajai, Bahonar, and three others.[2] The assassin was identified as Massoud Kashmiri, an operative of the People's Mujahedin of Iran (also known as the MKO, MEK and PMOI), who had infiltrated the Prime Minister's office in the guise of a state security official. Rajai was buried in Behesht-e Zahra.
References
- ^ "Rajai Sworn In; Bani-Sadr Predicts Revolt", Pittsburgh Press, 2 August 1981, pA-8
- ^ Facts on File Yearbook 1981
Political offices Preceded by
Mehdi BazarganPrime Minister of Iran
1980–1981Succeeded by
Mohammad Javad BahonarPreceded by
Karim KhodapanahiMinister of Foreign Affairs
1981Succeeded by
Mir-Hossein MousaviPreceded by
Abolhassan BanisadrPresident of Iran
1981Succeeded by
Ali KhameneiPresidents of Iran (List) Abulhassan Banisadr • Mohammad-Ali Rajai • Ali Khamenei • Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani • Mohammad Khatami • Mahmoud AhmadinejadPrime Ministers of Iran (List) Qajar dynasty
(1906–1925)Nasrullah Khan · Amir Asghar Khan · Tonekaboni · Mafi · Hedayat · Kamran Mirza · Tonekaboni · Saad ad-Daula · Tonekaboni · Vosough · Mostowfi · Vosough · Tonekaboni · Saad ad-Daula · Mirza Mohammed-Ali Khan · Mostowfi · Farmanfarma · Majid Mirza · Mostowfi · Farmanfarma · Vosough · Mostowfi · Majid Mirza · Pirnia · Momtaz os-Saltaneh · Pirnia · Fathollah Khan Akbar · Tabatabaee · Qavam · Malek Mansur Mirza · Pirnia · Qavam · Mostowfi · Pirnia · Reza Khan Sardar SepahImperial State of Iran
(1925–1979)Foroughi · Mostowfi · Hedayat · Foroughi · Jam · Matin-Daftari · A.Mansur · Foroughi · Soheili · Qavam · Soheili · Sa'ed · Bayat · Hakimi · Sadr · Hakimi · Qavam · Hekmat · Hakimi · Hazhir · Sa'ed · A.Mansur · Razmara · Ala' · Mosaddegh · Qavam · Mosaddegh · Zahedi · Ala' · Eghbal · Sharif-Emami · Amini · Alam · H.A.Mansur · Hoveida · Amouzegar · Sharif-Emami · Azhari · BakhtiarIslamic Republic of Iran
(1979–present)Ministers of Foreign Affairs of Iran Abdolvahhab Khan • Saeed Khan Ansari • Nosrat-ed-Dowleh • Ali Soheili • Mowzafar Alam • Hossein Ala' • Mahmoud Salehi • Mohsen Raees • Bagher Kazemi • Hossein Navab • Hossein Fatemi • Abdol-Hossein Meftah • Fazlollah Zahedi • Abdollah Entezam • Ali-Gholi Ardalan • Abbas Aram • Jafar Sharif-Emami • Hossein Ghods-Nakhai • Abbas Aram • Ardeshir Zahedi • Abbas-Ali Khalatbari • Amir Khosro Afshar • Ahmad Mirfenderescy • Karim Sanjabi • Mehdi Bazargan • Ebrahim Yazdi • Abulhassan Banisadr • Sadegh Ghotbzadeh • Mohammad Karim Khodapanahi • Mohammad-Ali Rajai • Mir-Hossein Mousavi • Ali Akbar Velayati • Kamal Kharazi • Manouchehr Mottaki • Ali Akbar Salehi
Categories:- 1933 births
- 1981 deaths
- Assassinated Iranian politicians
- Assassinated heads of state
- Government ministers of Iran
- People from Qazvin
- Presidents of Iran
- Prime Ministers of Iran
- People murdered in Iran
- Islamic Republican Party politicians
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