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Preamble
-
The Dawn of the Movement
-
Islamic Government
-
The Wrath of the People
-
The Price the Nation Paid
-
The Form of Government in
Islam
-
The Wilayah of the Just
Faqih
-
The Economy is a Means,
Not an End
-
Woman in the Constitution
-
An Ideological Army
-
The Judiciary in the
Constitution
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Executive Power
-
Mass-Communication Media
-
Representatives
Chapter I:
Chapter II:
Chapter III:
Chapter IV:
Chapter V:
Chapter VI:
Chapter VII:
Chapter VIII:
Chapter IX:
Chapter X:
Chapter XI:
Chapter XII:
Chapter XIII:
Chapter XIV:
Some of Islamic Sources of the
Constitution
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful
We sent aforetime Our apostles
with clear signs, and sent down with them the Book and the
Balance that men may uphold justice.... (57:25)
Preamble
The Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran advances
the cultural, social, political, and economic institutions
of Iranian society based on Islamic principles and norms,
which represent an honest aspiration of the Islamic Ummah.
This aspiration was exemplified by the nature of the great
Islamic Revolution of Iran, and by the course of the Muslim
people's struggle, from its beginning until victory, as
reflected in the decisive and forceful calls raised by all
segments of the populations. Now, at the threshold of this
great victory, our nation, with all its beings, seeks its
fulfillment.
The basic characteristic of this revolution, which
distinguishes it from other movements that have taken place
in Iran during the past hundred years, is its ideological
and Islamic nature. After experiencing the anti-despotic
constitutional movement and the anti-colonialist movement
centered on the nationalization of the oil industry, the
Muslim people of Iran learned from this costly experience
that the obvious and fundamental reason for the failure of
those movements was their lack of an ideological basis.
Although the Islamic line of thought and the direction
provided by militant religious leaders played an essential
role in the recent movements, nonetheless, the struggles
waged in the course of those movements quickly fell into
stagnation due to departure from genuine Islamic positions.
Thus it was that the awakened conscience of the nation,
under the leadership of Imam Khumayni, came to perceive the
necessity of pursuing a genuinely Islamic and ideological
line in its struggles. And this time, the militant 'ulama'
of the country, who had always been in the forefront of
popular movements, together with the committed writers and
intellectuals, found new impetus by following his
leadership.
The Dawn of the Movement
The devastating protest of Imam Khumayni against the
American conspiracy known as the "White Revolution,"
which was a step intended to stabilize the foundations of
despotic rule and to reinforce the political, cultural, and
economic dependence of Iran on world imperialism, brought
into being a united movement of the people and, immediately
afterwards, a momentous revolution of the Muslim nation in
June 1963. Although this revolution was drowned in blood, in
reality it heralded the beginning of the blossoming of a
glorious and massive uprising, which confirmed the central
role of Imam Khumayni as an Islamic leader. Despite his
exile from Iran after his protest against the humiliating
law of capitulation (which provided legal immunity for
American advisers), the firm bond between the Imam and the
people endured, and the Muslim nation, particularly
committed intellectuals and militant 'ulama', continued
their struggle in the face of banishment and imprisonment,
torture and execution.
Throughout this time, the conscious and responsible segment
of society was bringing enlightenment to the people from the
strongholds of the mosques, centers of religious teaching,
and universities. Drawing inspiration from the revolutionary
and fertile teachings of Islam, they began the unrelenting
yet fruitful struggle of raising the level of ideological
awareness and revolutionary consciousness of the Muslim
people. The despotic regime which had begun the suppression
of the Islamic movement with barbaric attacks on the
Faydiyyah Madrasah, Tehran University, and all other active
centers of revolution, in an effort to evade the
revolutionary anger of the people, resorted to the most
savage and brutal measures. And in these circumstances,
execution by firing squads, endurance of medieval tortures,
and long terms of imprisonment were the price our Muslim
nation had to pay to prove its firm resolve to continue the
struggle. The Islamic Revolution of Iran was nurtured by the
blood of hundreds of young men and women, infused with
faith, who raised their cries of "Allahu Akbar" at
daybreak in execution yards, or were gunned down by the
enemy in streets and marketplaces. Meanwhile, the continuing
declarations and messages of the Imam that were issued on
various occasions, extended and deepened the consciousness
and determination of the Muslim nation to the utmost.
Islamic Government
The plan of the Islamic government as proposed by Imam
Khumayni at the height of the period of repression and
strangulation practiced by the despotic regime, produced a
new specific, and streamline motive for the Muslim people,
opening up before them the true path of Islamic ideological
struggle, and giving greater intensity to the struggle of
militant and committed Muslims both within the country and
abroad.
The movement continued on this course until finally popular
dissatisfaction and intense rage of the public caused by the
constantly increasing repression at home, and the projection
of the struggle at the international level after exposure of
the regime by the 'ulama' and militant students, shook the
foundations of the regime violently. The regime and its
sponsors were compelled to decrease the intensity of
repression and to "liberalize" the political
atmosphere of the country.
This, they imagined, would serve as a safety valve, which
would prevent their eventual downfall. But the people,
aroused, conscious, and resolute under the decisive and
unfaltering leadership of the Imam, embarked on a
triumphant, unified, comprehensive, and countrywide
uprising.<P>
The Wrath of the People
The publication of an outrageous article meant to malign the
revered 'ulama' and in particular Imam Khumayni on 7 Jan
1978 by the ruling regime accelerated the revolutionary
movement and caused an outburst of popular outrage across
the country. The regime attempted to quiet the heat of the
people's anger by drowning the protest and uprising in
blood, but the bloodshed only quickened the pulse rate of
the Revolution. The seventh-day and fortieth-day
commemorations of the martyrs of the Revolution, like a
series of steady heartbeats, gave greater vitality,
intensity, vigor, and solidarity to this movement all over
the country. In the course of this popular ovement, the
employees of all government establishments took an active
part in the effort to overthrow the tyrannical regime by
calling a general strike and participating in street
demonstrations. The widespread solidarity of men and women
of all segments of society and of all political and
religious factions, played a clearly determining role in the
struggle. Especially the women were actively and massively
present in a most conspicuous manner at all stages of this
great struggle. The common sight of mothers with infants in
their arms rushing towards the scene of battle and in front
of the barrels of machine-guns indicated the essential and
decisive role played by this major segment of society in the
struggle.
The Price the Nation Paid
After slightly more than a year of continuous and
unrelenting struggle, the sapling of the evolution, watered
by the blood of more than 60,000 martyrs and 100,000 wounded
and disabled, not to mention property damage, came to bear
fruit amidst the cries of "Independence! Freedom! Islamic
government!". This great movement, which attained
victory through reliance upon faith, unity, and the
decisiveness of its leadership at every critical and
sensitive juncture, as well as the self-sacrificing spirit
of the people, succeeded in upsetting all the calculations
of imperialism and destroying all its connections and
institutions, thereby opening a new chapter in the history
of all-embracing popular revolutions of the world.
On 12 and 13 Feb 1979, the world witnessed the collapse of
the monarchical regime. Domestic tyranny and foreign
domination, both of which were based upon it, were
shattered. This great success proved to be the vanguard of
Islamic government -- a long-cherished desire of the Muslim
people -- and brought with it the glad tidings of final
victory.
Unanimously, the Iranian people declared their final and
firm decision, in the referendum on the Islamic Republic, to
bring about a new political system, that of the Islamic
Republic. A majority of 98.2% of the people voted for this
system. The Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran,
setting forth as it does the political, social, cultural,
and economic institutions and their relations that are to
exist in society, must now provide for the consolidation of
the foundations of Islamic government, and propose the plan
of a new system of government to be erected on the ruins of
the previous order.
The Form of Government in
Islam
In the view of Islam, government does not derive from the
interests of a class, nor does it serve the domination of an
individual or a group. Rather, it represents the fulfillment
of the political ideal of a people who bear a common faith
and common outlook, taking an organized form in order to
initiate the process of intellectual and ideological
evolution towards the final goal, i.e., movement towards
Allah. Our nation, in the course of its revolutionary
developments, has cleansed itself of the dust and impurities
that accumulated during the past and purged itself of
foreign ideological influences, returning to authentic
intellectual standpoints and world-view of Islam. It now
intends to establish an ideal and model society on the basis
of Islamic norms. The mission of the Constitution is to
realize the ideological objectives of the movement and to
create conditions conducive to the development of man in
accordance with the noble and universal values of Islam.
With due attention to the Islamic content of the Iranian
Revolution, the Constitution provides the necessary basis
for ensuring the continuation of the Revolution at home and
abroad. In particular, in the development of international
relations, the Constitution will strive with other Islamic
and popular movements to prepare the way for the formation
of a single world community (in accordance with the Koranic
verse "This your community is a single community, and I
am your Lord, so worship Me" [21:92]), and to assure the
continuation of the struggle for the liberation of all
deprived and oppressed peoples in the world.
With due attention to the essential character of this great
movement, the Constitution guarantees the rejection of all
forms of intellectual and social tyranny and economic
monopoly, and aims at entrusting the destinies of the people
to the people themselves in order to break completely with
the system of oppression. (This is in accordance with the
Koranic verse "He removes from them their burdens an the
fetters that were upon them" [7:157]).
In creating, on the basis of ideological outlook, the
political infrastructures and institutions that are the
foundation of society, the righteous will assume the
responsibility of governing and administering the country
(in accordance with the Koranic verse "Verily My
righteous servants shall inherit the earth" [21:105]).
Legislation setting forth regulations for the administration
of society will revolve around the Koran and the Sunnah.
Accordingly, the exercise of meticulous and earnest
supervision by just, pious, and committed scholars of Islam
is an absolute necessity. In addition, the aim of government
is to foster the growth of man in such a way that he
progresses towards the establishment of a Divine order (in
accordance with the Koranic phrase "And toward God is the
journeying" [3:28]); and to create favorable conditions
for the emergence and blossoming of man's innate capacities,
so that the theomorphic dimensions of the human being are
manifested (in accordance with the injunction of the Prophet
(S) "Mould yourselves according to the Divine morality");
this goal cannot be attained without the active and broad
participation of all segments of society in the process of
social development.
With due attention to this goal, the Constitution provides
the basis of such participation by all members of society at
all stages of the political decision-making process on which
the destiny of the country depends. In this way during the
course of human development towards perfection, each
individual will himself be involved in, and responsible for
the growth, advancement, and leadership of society.
Precisely in this lies the realization of the holy
government upon earth (in accordance with the Koranic verse
"And we wish to show favor to those who have been
oppressed upon earth, and to make them leaders and the
inheritors." [28:5]).
The Wilayah of the Just Faqih
In keeping with the principles of governance and the
perpetual necessity of leadership, the Constitution provides
for the establishment of leadership by a holy person
possessing the necessary qualifications and recognized as
leader by the people (this is in accordance with the saying
"The direction of affairs is in the hands of those who
are learned concerning God and are trustworthy in matters
pertaining to what He permits and forbids"). Such
leadership will prevent any deviation by the various organs
of State from their essential Islamic duties.
The Economy is a Means, Not an
End
In strengthening the foundations of the economy, the
fundamental consideration will be fulfillment of the
material needs of man in the course of his overall growth
and development. This principle contrasts with other
economic systems, where the aim is concentration and
accumulation of wealth and maximization of profit. In
materialist schools of thought, the economy represents an
end in itself, so that it comes to be a subversive and
corrupting factor in the course of man's development. In
Islam, the economy is a means, and all that is required of a
means is that it should be an efficient factor contributing
to the attainment of the ultimate goal.
From this viewpoint, the economic program of Islam consists
of providing the means needed for the emergence of the
various creative capacities of the human being. Accordingly,
it is the duty of the Islamic government to furnish all
citizens with equal and appropriate opportunities, to
provide them with work, and to satisfy their essential
needs, so that the course of their progress may be assured.
Woman in the Constitution
Through the creation of Islamic social infrastructures, all
the elements of humanity that served the multifaceted
foreign exploitation shall regain their true identity and
human rights. As a part of this process, it is only natural
that women should benefit from a particularly large
augmentation of their rights, because of the greater
oppression that they suffered under the old regime.
The family is the fundamental unit of society and the main
center for the growth and edification of human being.
Compatibility with respect to belief and ideal, which
provides the primary basis for man's development and growth,
is the main consideration in the establishment of a family.
It is the duty of the Islamic government to provide the
necessary facilities for the attainment of this goal. This
view of the family unit delivers woman from being regarded
as an object or instrument in the service of promoting
consumerism and exploitation. Not only does woman recover
thereby her momentous and precious function of motherhood,
rearing of ideologically committed human beings, she also
assumes a pioneering social role and becomes the fellow
struggler of man in all vital areas of life. Given the
weighty responsibilities that woman thus assumes, she is
accorded in Islam great value and nobility.
An Ideological Army
In the formation and equipping of the country's defence
forces, due attention must be paid to faith and ideology as
the basic criteria. Accordingly, the Army of the Islamic
Republic of Iran and the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps
are to be organized in conformity with this goal, and they
will be responsible not only for guarding and preserving the
frontiers of the country, but also for fulfilling the
ideological mission of jihad in God's way; that is,
extending the sovereignty of God's law throughout the world
(this is in accordance with the Koranic verse "Prepare
against them whatever force you are able to muster, and
strings of horses, striking fear into the enemy of God and
your enemy, and others besides them" [8:60]).
The Judiciary in the
Constitution
The judiciary is of vital importance in the context of
safeguarding the rights of the people in accordance with the
line followed by the Islamic movement, and the prevention of
deviations within the Islamic nation. Provision has
therefore been made for the creation of a judicial system
based on Islamic justice and operated by just judges with
meticulous knowledge of the Islamic laws. This system,
because of its essentially sensitive nature and the need for
full ideological conformity, must be free from every kind of
unhealthy relation and connection (this is in accordance
with the Koranic verse "When you judge among the people,
judge with justice" [4:58]).
Executive Power
Considering the particular importance of the executive power
in implementing the laws and ordinances of Islam for the
sake of establishing the rule of just relations over
society, and considering, too, its vital role in paving the
way for the attainment of the ultimate goal of life, the
executive power must work toward the creation of an Islamic
society. Consequently, the confinement of the executive
power within any kind of complex and inhibiting system that
delays or impedes the attainment of this goal is rejected by
Islam. Therefore, the system of bureaucracy, the result and
product of old forms of government, will be firmly cast
away, so that an executive system that functions efficiently
and swiftly in the fulfillment of its administrative
commitments comes into existence.
Mass-Communication Media
The mass-communication media, radio and television, must
serve the diffusion of Islamic culture in pursuit of the
evolutionary course of the Islamic Revolution. To this end,
the media should be used as a forum for healthy encounter of
different ideas, but they must strictly refrain from
diffusion and propagation of destructive and anti-Islamic
practices.
It is incumbent on all to adhere to the principles of this
Constitution, for it regards as its highest aim the freedom
and dignity of the human race and provides for the growth
and development of the human being. It is also necessary
that the Muslim people should participate actively in the
construction of Islamic society by selecting competent and
believing officials and keeping close and constant watch on
their performance. They may then hope for success in
building an ideal Islamic society that can be a model for
all people of the world and a witness to its perfection (in
accordance with the Koranic verse "Thus We made you a
median community, that you might be witnesses to men"
[2:143]).
Representatives
The Assembly of Experts, composed of representatives of the
people, completed its task of framing the Constitution, on
the basis of the draft proposed by the government as well as
all the proposals received from different groups of the
people, in one hundred and seventy-five articles arranged in
twelve chapters, in 1979, and in accordance with the aims
and aspirations set out above, with the hope that this
century will witness the establishment of a universal holy
government and the downfall of all others.
Chapter I: General Principles
Article 1:
The form of government of Iran is that of an Islamic
Republic, endorsed by the people of Iran on the basis of
their longstanding belief in the sovereignty of truth and
Qur'anic justice, in the referendum of Farwardin 9 and 10 in
the year 1358 of the solar Islamic calendar, corresponding
to Jamadi al-'Awwal 1 and 2 in the year 1399 of the lunar
Islamic calendar (March 29 and 30, 1979], through the
affirmative vote of a majority of 98.2\% of eligible voters,
held after the victorious Islamic Revolution led by the
eminent marji' al-taqlid, Ayatullah al-Uzma Imam Khumayni.
Article 2:
The Islamic Republic is a system based on belief in:
-
the One God (as stated in
the phrase "There is no god except Allah"), His
exclusive sovereignty and the right to legislate, and
the necessity of submission to His commands;
-
Divine revelation and its
fundamental role in setting forth the laws;
-
the return to God in the
Hereafter, and the constructive role of this belief in
the course of man's ascent towards God;
-
the justice of God in
creation and legislation;
-
continuous leadership
(imamah) and perpetual guidance, and its fundamental
role in ensuring the uninterrupted process of the
revolution of Islam;
-
the exalted dignity and
value of man, and his freedom coupled with
responsibility before God; in which equity, justice,
political, economic, social, and cultural independence,
and national solidarity are secured by recourse to:
-
continuous ijtihad of
the fuqaha' possessing necessary qualifications,
exercised on the basis off the Qur'an and the Sunnah
of the Ma'sumun, upon all of whom be peace;
-
sciences and arts and
the most advanced results of human experience,
together with the effort to advance them further;
-
negation of all forms
of oppression, both the infliction of and the
submission to it, and of dominance, both its
imposition and its acceptance.
Article 3:
In order to attain the objectives specified in Article 2,
the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran has the duty
of directing all its resources to the following goals:
-
the creation of a
favorable environment for the growth of moral virtues
based on faith and piety and the struggle against all
forms of vice and corruption;
-
raising the level of
public awareness in all areas, through the proper use of
the press, mass media, and other means;
-
free education and
physical training for everyone at all levels, and the
facilitation and expansion of higher education;
-
strengthening the spirit
of inquiry, investigation, and innovation in all areas
of science, technology, and culture, as well as Islamic
studies, by establishing research centers and
encouraging researchers;
-
the complete elimination
of imperialism and the prevention of foreign influence;
-
the elimination of all
forms of despotism and autocracy and all attempts to
monopolize power;
-
ensuring political and
social freedoms within the framework of the law;
-
the participation of the
entire people in determining their political, economic,
social, and cultural destiny;
-
the abolition of all forms
of undesirable discrimination and the provision of
equitable opportunities for all, in both the material
and intellectual spheres;
-
the creation of a correct
administrative system and elimination of superfluous
government organizations;
-
all round strengthening of
the foundations of national defence to the utmost degree
by means of universal military training for the sake of
safeguarding the independence, territorial integrity,
and the Islamic order of the country;
-
the planning of a correct
and just economic system, in accordance with Islamic
criteria in order to create welfare, eliminate poverty,
an(i abolish all forms of deprivation with respect to
food, housing, work, health care, and the provision of
social insurance for all;
-
the attainment of
self-sufficiency in scientific, technological,
industrial, agricultural, and military domains, and
other similar spheres;
-
securing the multifarious
rights of all citizens, both women and men, and
providing legal protection for all, as well as the
equality of-all before the law;
-
the expansion and
strengthening of Islamic brotherhood and public
cooperation among all the people;
-
framing the foreign policy
of the country on the basis of Islamic criteria,
fraternal commitment to all Muslims, and unsparing
support to the mustad'afiin of the world.
Article 4:
All civil, penal financial,
economic, administrative, cultural, military, political, and
other laws and regulations must be based on Islamic
criteria. This principle applies absolutely and generally to
all articles of the Constitution as well as to all other
laws and regulations, and the fuqaha' of the Guardian
Council are judges in this matter.
Article 5:
During the Occultation of the Wali al-Asr (may God hasten
his reappearance), the wilayah and leadership of the Ummah
devolve upon the just ('adil] and pious [muttaqi] faqih, who
is fully aware of the circumstances of his age; courageous,
resourceful, and possessed of administrative ability, will
assume the responsibilities of this office in accordance
with Article 107.
Article 6:
In the Islamic Republic of Iran, the affairs of the country
must be administered on the basis of public opinion
expressed by the means of elections, including the election
of the President, the representatives of the Islamic
Consultative Assembly, and the members of councils, or by
means of referenda in matters specified in other articles of
this Constitution.
Article 7:
In accordance with the command of the Qur'an contained in
the verse ("Their affairs are by consultations among them"
[42:38]) and ("Consult them in affairs" [3:159]),
consultative bodies - such as the Islamic Consultative
Assembly, the Provincial Councils, and the City, Region,
District, and Village Councils and the likes of them - are
the decision-making and administrative organs of the
country.
The nature of each of these councils, together with the
manner of their formation, their jurisdiction, and scope of
their duties and functions, is determined by the
Constitution and laws derived from it.
Article 8:
In the Islamic Republic of Iran, al-'amr bilma'ruf wa
al-nahy 'an al-munkar is a universal and reciprocal duty
that must be fulfilled by the people with respect to one
another, by the government with respect to the people, and
by the people with respect to the government. The
conditions, limits, and nature of this duty will be
specified by law. (This is in accordance with the Qur'anic
verse; "The believers, men and women, are guardians of one
another; they enjoin the good and forbid the evil" [9:71]).
Article 9:
In the Islamic Republic of Iran, the freedom, independence,
unity, and territorial integrity of the country are
inseparable from one another, and their preservation is the
duty of the government and all individual citizens. No
individual, group, or >authority, has the right to infringe
in the slightest way upon the political, cultural, economic,
and military independence or the territorial integrity of
Iran under the pretext of exercising freedom. Similarly, no
authority has the right to abrogate legitimate freedoms, not
even by enacting laws and regulations for that purpose,
under the pretext of preserving the independence and
territorial integrity of the country.
Article 10:
Since the family is the
fundamental unit of Islamic society, all laws, regulations,
and pertinent programmes must tend to facilitate the
formation of a family, ,and to safeguard its sanctity and
the stability of family relations on the basis of the law
and the ethics of Islam.
Article 11:
In accordance with the sacred
verse of the Qur'an ("This your community is a single
community, and I am your Lord, so worship Me" [21:92]), all
Muslims form a single nation, and the government of the
Islamic Republic of Iran has the duty of formulating its
general policies with a view to cultivating the friendship
and unity of all Muslim peoples, and it must constantly
strive to bring about the political, economic, and cultural
unity of the Islamic world.
Article 12:
The official religion of Iran
is Islam and the Twelver Ja'fari school [in usual al-Din and
fiqh], and this principle will remain eternally immutable.
Other Islamic schools, including the Hanafi, Shafi'i,
Maliki, Hanbali, and Zaydi, are to be accorded full respect,
and their followers are free to act in accordance with their
own jurisprudence in performing their religious rites. These
schools enjoy official status in matters pertaining to
religious education, affairs of personal status (marriage,
divorce, inheritance, and wills) and related litigation in
courts of law. In regions of the country where Muslims
following any one of these schools of fiqh constitute the
majority, local regulations, within the bounds of the
jurisdiction of local councils, are to be in accordance with
the respective school of fiqh, without infringing upon the
rights of the followers of other schools.
Article 13:
Zoroastrian, Jewish, and
Christian Iranians are the only recognized religious
minorities, who, within the limits of the law, are free to
perform their religious rites and ceremonies, and to act
according to their own canon in matters of personal affairs
and religious education.
Article 14:
In accordance with the sacred
verse; ("God does not forbid you to deal kindly and justly
with those who have not fought against you because of your
religion and who have not expelled you from your homes"
[60:8]), the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran and
all Mu slims are duty-bound to treat non-Muslims in
conformity with ethical norms and the principles of Islamic
justice and equity, and to respect their human rights. This
principle applies to all who refrain from engaging in
conspiracy or activity against Islam and the Islamic
Republic of Iran.
Chapter I:The Official
Language, Script, Calendar, and Flag of the Country
Article 15:
The official language and
script of Iran, the lingua franca of its people, is Persian.
Official documents, correspondence, and texts, as well as
text-books, must be in this language and script. However,
the use of regional and tribal languages in the press and
mass media, as well as for teaching of their literature in
schools, is allowed in addition to Persian.
Article 16:
Since the language of the
Qur'an and Islamic texts and teachings is Arabic, and since
Persian literature is thoroughly permeated by this language,
it must be taught after elementary level, in all classes of
secondary school and in all areas of study.
Article 17:
The official calendar of the
country takes as its point of departure the migration of the
Prophet of Islam - God's peace and blessings upon him and
his Family. Both the solar and lunar Islamic calendars are
recognized, but government offices will function according
to the solar calendar. The official weekly holiday is
Friday.
Article 18:
The official flag of Iran is
composed of green, white and red colors with the special
emblem of the Islamic Republic, together with the motto
[Allah-o Akbar].
Chapter III: The Rights of the
People
Article 19:
All people of Iran, whatever
the ethnic group or tribe to which they belong, enjoy equal
rights; and color, race, language, and the like, do not
bestow any privilege.
Article 20:
All citizens of the country,
both men and women, equally enjoy the protection of the law
and enjoy all human, political, economic, social, and
cultural rights, in conformity with Islamic criteria.
Article 21:
The government must ensure the
rights of women in all respects, in conformity with Islamic
criteria, and accomplish the following goals:
-
create a favorable
environment for the growth of woman's personality and
the restoration of her rights, both the material and
intellectual;
-
the protection of mothers,
particularly during pregnancy and childbearing, and the
protection of children without guardians;
-
establishing competent
courts to protect and preserve the family;
-
the provision of special
insurance for widows, and aged women and women without
support;
-
the awarding of
guardianship of children to worthy mothers, in order to
protect the interests of the children, in the absence of
a legal guardian.
Article 22:
The dignity, life, property,
rights, residence, and occupation of the individual are
inviolate, except in cases sanctioned by law.
Article 23:
The investigation of
individuals' beliefs is forbidden, and no one may be
molested or taken to task simply for holding a certain
belief.
Article 24:
Publications and the press
have freedom of expression except when it is detrimental to
the fundamental principles of Islam or the rights of the
public. The details of this exception will be specified by
law.
Article 25:
The inspection of letters and
the failure to deliver them, the recording and disclosure of
telephone conversations, the disclosure of telegraphic and
telex communications, censorship, or the willful failure to
transmit them, eavesdropping, and all forms of covert
investigation are forbidden, except as provided by law.
Article 26:
The formation of parties,
societies, political or professional associations, as well
as religious societies, whether Islamic or pertaining to one
of the recognized religious minorities, is permitted
provided they do not violate the principles of independence,
freedom, national unity, the criteria of Islam, or the basis
of the Islamic republic. No one may be prevented from
participating in the aforementioned groups, or be compelled
to participate in them.
Article 27:
Public gatherings and marches
may be freely held, provided arms are not carried and that
they are not detrimental to the fundamental principles of
Islam.
Article 28:
Everyone has the right to
choose any occupation he wishes, if it is not contrary to
Islam and the public interests, and does not infringe the
rights of others.
The government has the duty, with due consideration of the
need of society for different kinds of work, to provide
every citizen with the opportunity to work, and to create
equal conditions for obtaining it.
Article 29:
To benefit from social
security with respect to retirement, unemployment, old age,
disability, absence of a guardian, and benefits relating to
being stranded, accidents, health services, and medical care
and treatment, provided through Insurance or other means, is
accepted as a universal right.
The government must provide the foregoing services and
financial support for every individual citizen by drawing,
in accordance with the law, on the national revenues and
funds obtained through public contributions.
Article 30:
The government must provide
all citizens with free-education up to secondary school, and
must expand free higher education to the extent required by
the country for attaining self-sufficiency.
Article 31:
It is the right of every
Iranian individual and family to possess housing
commensurate with his nods. The government must maker land
available for the implementation of this article, according
priority to those whose need is greatest, in particular the
rural population and the workers.
Article 32:
No one may be arrested except
by the order and in accordance with the procedure laid down
by law. In case of arrest, charges with the reasons for
accusation must, without delay, be communicated and
explained to the accused in writing, and a provisional
dossier must be forwarded to the competent judicial
authorities within a maximum of twenty-four hours so that
the preliminaries to the trial can be completed as swiftly
as possible. The violation of this article will be liable to
punishment in accordance with the law.
Article 33:
No one can be banished from
his place of residence, prevented from residing in the place
of his choice, or compelled to reside in a given locality,
except in cases provided by law.
Article 34:
It is the indisputable right
of every citizen to seek justice by recourse to competent
courts. All citizens have right of access to such courts,
and no one can be barred from courts to which he has a legal
right of recourse.
Article 35:
Both parties to a lawsuit have
the right in all courts of law to select an attorney, and if
they are unable to do so, arrangements must be made to
provide them with legal counsel.
Article 36:
The passing and execution of a
sentence must be only by a competent court and in accordance
with law.
Article 37:
Innocence is to be presumed,
and no one is to be held guilty of a charge unless his or
her guilt has been established by a competent court.
Article 38:
All forms of torture for the
purpose of extracting confession or acquiring information
are forbidden. Compulsion of individuals to testify,
confess, or take an oath is not permissible; and any
testimony, confession, or oath obtained under duress is
devoid of value and credence. Violation of this article is
liable to punishment in accordance with the law.
Article 39:
All affronts to the dignity
and repute of persons arrested, detained, imprisoned, or
banished in accordance with the law, whatever form they may
take, are forbidden and liable to punishment.
Article 40:
No one is entitled to exercise
his rights in a way injurious to others or detrimental to
public interests.
Article 41:
Iranian citizenship is the
indisputable right of every Iranian, and the government
cannot withdraw citizenship from any Iranian unless he
himself requests it or acquires the citizenship of another
country.
Article 42:
Foreign nationals may acquire
Iranian citizenship within the framework of the laws.
Citizenship may be withdrawn from such persons if another
State accepts them as its citizens or if they request it.
Chapter IV:Economy and
Financial Affairs
Article 43:
The economy of the Islamic
Republic of Iran, with its objectives of achieving the
economic independence of the society, uprooting poverty and
deprivation, and fulfilling human needs in the process of
development while preserving human liberty, is. based on the
following criteria:
-
the provision of basic
necessities for all citizens: housing, food, clothing,
hygiene, medical treatment, education, and the necessary
facilities for the establishment of a family;
-
ensuring conditions and
opportunities of employment for everyone, with a view to
attaining full employment; placing the means of work at
the disposal of everyone who is able to work but lacks
the means, in the form of cooperatives, through granting
interest-free loans or recourse to any other legitimate
means that neither results in the concentration or
circulation of wealth in the hands of a few individuals
or groups, nor turns the government into a major
absolute employer. These steps must be taken with due
regard for the requirements governing the general
economic planning of the country at each stage of its
growth;
-
the plan for the national
economy, must be structured in such a manner that the
form, con-tent, and hours of work of every individual
will allow him sufficient leisure and energy to engage,
beyond his professional endeavor, in intellectual,
political, and social activities leading to all-round
development of his self, to take active part in leading
the affairs of the country, improve his skills, and to
make full use of his creativity;
-
respect for the right to
choose freely one's occupation; refraining from
compelling anyone to engage in a particular job; and
preventing the exploitation of another's labor;
-
the prohibition of
infliction of harm and loss upon others, monopoly,
hoarding, usury, and other illegitimate and evil
practices;
-
the prohibition of
extravagance and wastefulness in all matters related to
the economy, including consumption, investment,
production, distribution, and services;
-
the utilization of science
and technology, and the training of skilled personnel in
accordance with the developmental needs of the country's
economy;
-
prevention of foreign
economic domination over the country's economy;
-
emphasis on increase of
agricultural, livestock, and industrial production in
order to satisfy public needs and to make the country
self-sufficient and free from dependence.
Article 44:
The economy of the Islamic
Republic of Iran is to consist of three sectors: state,
cooperative, and private, and is to be based on systematic
and sound planning.
The state sector is to include all large-scale and mother
industries, foreign trade, major minerals, banking,
insurance, power generation, dams and large-scale irrigation
networks, radio and television, post, telegraph and
telephone services, aviation, shipping, roads, railroads and
the like; all these will be publicly owned and administered
by the State.
The cooperative sector is to include cooperative companies
and enterprises concerned with production and distribution,
in urban and rural areas, in accordance with Islamic
criteria.
The private sector consists of those activities concerned
with agriculture, animal husbandry, industry, trade, and
services that supplement the economic activities of the
state and cooperative sectors.
Ownership in each of these three sectors is protected by the
laws of the Islamic Republic, in so far as this ownership is
in conformity with the other articles of this chapter, does
not go beyond the bounds of Islamic law, contributes to the
economic growth and progress of the country, and does not
harm society.
The [precise] scope of each of these sectors, as well as the
regulations and conditions governing their operation, will
be specified by law.
Article 45:
Public wealth and property,
such as uncultivated or abandoned land, mineral deposits,
seas, lakes, rivers and other public water- ways, mountains,
valleys, forests, marshlands, natural forests, unenclosed
pastureland, legacies without heirs, property of
undetermined ownership, and public property recovered from
usurpers, shall be at the disposal of the Islamic government
for it to utilize in accordance with the public interest.
Law will specify detailed procedures for the utilization of
each of the foregoing items.
Article 46:
Everyone is the owner of the
fruits of his legitimate business and labor, and no one may
deprive another of the opportunity of business and work
under the pretext of his right to ownership.
Article 47:
Private ownership,
legitimately acquired, is to be respected. The relevant
criteria are determined by law.
Article 48:
There must be no
discrimination among the various provinces with regard to
the exploitation of natural resources, utilization of public
revenues, and distribution of economic activities among the
various provinces and regions of the country, thereby
ensuring that every region has access to the necessary
capital and facilities in accordance with its needs and
capacity for growth.
Article 49:
The government has the
responsibility of confiscating all wealth accumulated
through usury, usurpation, bribery, embezzlement, theft,
gambling, misuse of endowments, misuse of government
contracts and transactions, the sale of uncultivated lands
and other resources subject to public ownership, the
operation of centers of corruption, and other illicit means
and sources, and restoring it to its legitimate owner; and
if no such owner can be identified, it must be entrusted to
the public treasury. This rule must be executed by the
government with due care, after investigation and furnishing
necessary evidence in accordance with the law of Islam.
Article 50:
The preservation of the
environment, in which the present as well as the future
generations have a right to flourishing social existence, is
regarded as a public duty in the Islamic Republic. Economic
and other activities that inevitably involve pollution of
the environment or cause irreparable damage to it are
therefore forbidden.
Article 51:
No form of taxation may be
imposed except in accordance with the law. Provisions for
tax exemption and reduction will be determined by law.
Article 52:
The annual budget of the
country will be drain up by the government, in the manner
specified by law, and submitted to the Islamic Consultative
Assembly for discussion and approval. Any change in the
figures contained in the budget will be in accordance with
the procedures prescribed by law.
Article 53:
All sums collected by the
government will be deposited into the government accounts at
the central treasury, and all disbursements, within the
limits of allocations approved, shall be made in accordance
with law.
Article 54:
The National Accounting Agency
is to be directly under the supervision of the Islamic
Consultative Assembly. Its organization and mode of
operation in Tehran and at the provincial capitals, are to
be determined by law.
Article 55:
The National Accounting Agency
will inspect and audit, in the manner prescribed by law, all
the accounts of ministries, government institutions and
companies as well as other organizations that draw, in any
way, on the general budget of the country, to ensure that no
expenditure exceeds the allocations approved and that all
sums are spent for the specified purpose. It will collect
all relevant accounts, documents, and records, in accordance
with law, and submit to the Islamic Consultative Assembly a
report for the settlement of each year's budget together
with its own comments. This report must be made available to
the public.
Chapter V: The Right of
National Sovereignty
Article 56:
Absolute sovereignty over the
world and man belongs to God, and it is He Who has made man
master of his own social destiny. No one can deprive man of
this divine right, nor subordinate it to the vested
interests of a particular individual or group. The people
are to exercise this divine right in the manner specified in
the following articles.
Article 57:
The powers of government in
the Islamic Republic are vested in the legislature, the
judiciary, and the executive powers, functioning under the
supervision of the absolute wilayat al-'amr and the
leadership of the Ummah, in accordance with the forthcoming
articles of this Constitution. These powers are independent
of each other.
Article 58:
The function of the
legislature are to be exercised through the Islamic
Consultative Assembly, consisting of the elected
representatives of the people. Legislation approved by this
body, after going through the stages specified in the
articles below, is communicated to the executive and the
judiciary for implementation.
Article 59:
In extremely important
economic, political, social, and cultural matters, the
function of the legislature may be exercised through direct
recourse to popular vote through a referendum. Any request
for such direct recourse to public opinion must be approved
by two-thirds of the members of the Islamic Consultative
Assembly.
Article 60:
The functions of the
executive, except in the matters that are directly placed
under the jurisdiction of the Leadership by the
Constitution, are to be exercised by the president and the
ministers.
Article 61:
the function of the judiciary
are to be performed by courts of justice, which are to be
formed in accordance with the criteria of Islam, and are
vested with the authority to examine and settle lawsuits,
protect the rights of the public, dispense and enact
justice, and implement the Divine limits [al-hudud
al-Ilahiyyah].
Chapter VI: The Legislative
Powers
Article 62:
The Islamic consultative
Assembly is constituted by the representatives of the people
elected directly and by secret ballot. The qualifications of
voters and candidates, as well as the nature of election,
will be specified by law.
Article 63:
The term of membership in the
Islamic Consulative Assembly is four years. Elections for
each term must take place before the end of the preceding
term, so that the country is never without an Assembly.
Article 64:
There are to be two hundred
seventy members of the Islamic Consultative Assembly which,
keeping in view the human, political, geographic and other
similar factors, may increase by not more than twenty for
each ten-year period from the date of the national
referendum of the year 1368 of the solar Islamic calendar.
The Zoroastrians and Jews will each elect one
representative; Assyrian and Chaldean Christians will
jointly elect one representative; and Armenian Christians in
the north and those in the south of the country will each
elect one representative.
The limits of the election constituencies and the number of
representatives will be deter-mined by law.
Article 65:
After the holding of
elections, sessions of the Islamic Consultative Assembly are
considered legally valid when two-thirds of the total number
of members are present. Drafts and bills will be approved in
accordance with the code of procedure approved by it, except
in cases where the Constitution has specified a certain
quorum.
The consent of two-thirds of all members present is
necessary for the approve of the code of procedure of the
Assembly.
Article 66:
The manner of election of the
Speaker and the Presiding Board of the Assembly, the number
of committees and their term of office, and matters related
to conducting the discussions and maintaining the discipline
of the Assembly will be determined by the code of procedure
of the Assembly.
Article 67:
Members of the Assembly must
take the following oath at the first session of the Assembly
and affix their signatures to its text:
In the Name of God, the
Compassionate, the Merciful. In the presence of the
Glorious Qur'an, I swear by God, the Exalted and
Almighty, and undertake, swearing by my own honor as a
human being, to protect the sanctity of Islam and guard
the accomplishments of the Islamic Revolution of the
Iranian people and the foundations of the Islamic
Republic; to protect, as a just trustee, the honor
bestowed upon me by the people, to observe piety in
fulfilling my duties as people's representative; to
remain always committed to the independence and honor of
the country; to fulfil my duties towards the nation and
the service of the people; to defend the Constitution;
and to bear in mind, both in speech and writing and in
the expression of my views, the independence of the
country, the freedom of the people, and the security of
their interests.
Members belonging to the religious minorities will swear by
their own sacred books while taking this oath.
Members not attending the first session will perform the
ceremony of taking the oath at the first session they
attend.
Article 68:
In time of war and the
military occupation of the country, elections due to be held
in occupied areas or countrywide may be delayed for a
specified period if proposed by the President of the
Republic, and approved by three-fourths of the total members
of the Islamic Consultative Assembly, with the endorsement
of the Guardian Council. If a new Assembly is not formed,
the previous one will continue to function.
Article 69:
The deliberations of the
Islamic Consultative Assembly must be open, and full minutes
of them made available to the public by the radio and the
official gazette. A closed session may be held in emergency
conditions, if it is required for national security, upon
the requisition of the President, one of the ministers, or
ten members of the Assembly. Legislation passed at a closed
session is valid only when approved by three-fourths of the
members in the presence of the Guardian Council. After
emergency conditions have ceased to exist, the minutes of
such closed sessions, together with any legislation approved
in them, must be made available to the public.
Article 70:
The President, his deputies
and the ministers have the right to participate in the open
sessions of the Assembly either collectively or
individually. They may also have their advisers accompany
them. If the members of the Assembly deem it necessary, the
ministers are obliged to attend. [Conversely], whenever they
request it, their statements are to be heard.
Article 71:
The Islamic Consultative
Assembly can establish laws on all matters, within the
limits of its competence as laid down in the Constitution.
Article 72:
The Islamic Consultative
Assembly cannot enact laws contrary to the usual and ahkam
of the official religion of the country or to the
Constitution. It is the duty of the Guardian Council to
determine whether a violation has occurred, in accordance
with Article 96.
Article 73:
The interpretation of ordinary
laws falls within the competence of the Islamic Consultative
Assembly. The intent of this Article does not prevent the
interpretations that judges may make in the course of
cassation.
Article 74:
Government bills are presented
to the Islamic Consultative Assembly after receiving the
approval of the Council of Ministers. Members' bills may be
introduced in the Islamic Consultative Assembly if sponsored
by at least fifteen members.
Article 75:
Members' bills and proposals
and amendments to governments bills proposed by members that
entail the reduction of the public income or the increase of
public expenditure may be introduced in the Assembly only if
means for compensating for the decrease in income or for
meeting the new expenditure are also specified.
Article 76:
The Islamic Consultative
Assembly has the right to investigate and examine all the
affairs of the country.
Article 77:
International treaties,
protocols, contracts, and agreements must be approved by the
Islamic Consultative Assembly.
Article 78:
All changes in the boundaries
of the country are forbidden, with the exception of minor
amendments in keeping with the interests of the country, on
condition that they are not unilateral, do not encroach on
the independence and territorial integrity of the country,
and receive the approval of four-fifths of the total members
of the Islamic Consultative Assembly.
Article 79:
The proclamation of martial
law is forbidden. In case of war or emergency conditions
akin to war, the government has the right to impose
temporarily certain necessary restrictions, with the
agreement of the Islamic Consultative Assembly. In no case
can such restrictions last for more than thirty days; if the
need for them persists beyond this limit, the government
must obtain new authorization for them from the Assembly.
Article 80:
The taking and giving of loans
or grants-in-aid, domestic and foreign, by the government,
must be approved by the Islamic Consultative Assembly.
Article 81:
The granting of concessions to
foreigners for the formation of companies or institutions
dealing with commerce, industry, agriculture, services or
mineral extraction, is absolutely forbidden.
Article 82:
The employment of foreign
experts is forbidden, except in cases of necessity and with
the approval of the Islamic Consultative Assembly.
Article 83:
Government buildings and
properties forming part of the national heritage cannot be
transferred except with the approval of the Islamic
Consultative Assembly; that, too, is not applicable in the
case of irreplaceable treasures.
Article 84:
Every representative is
responsible to the entire nation and has the right to
express his views on all internal and external affairs of
the country.
Article 85:
The right of membership is
vested with the individual, and is not transferable to
others. The Assembly cannot delegate the power of
legislation to an individual or committee. But whenever
necessary, it can delegate the power of legislating certain
laws to its own committees, in accordance with Article 72.
In such a case, the laws will be implemented on a tentative
basis for a period specified by the Assembly, and their
final approval will-rest with the Assembly.
Likewise, the Assembly may, in accordance with Article 72,
delegate to the relevant committees the responsibility for
permanent approval of articles of association of
organizations, companies, government institutions, or
organizations affiliated to the government and or invest the
authority in the government. In such a case, the government
approvals must not be inconsistent with the principles and
commandments of the official religion in the country and or
the Constitution which question shall be determined by the
Guardian Council in accordance with what is stated in
Article 96. In addition to this, the government approvals
shall not be against the laws and other general rules of the
country and, while calling for implementation, the same
shall be brought to the knowledge of the Speaker of the
Islamic Consultative Assembly for is study and indication
that the approvals in question are not inconsistent with the
aforesaid rules.
Article 86:
Members of the Assembly are
completely free in expressing their views and casting their
votes in the course of performing their duties as
representatives, and they cannot be prosecuted or arrested
for opinions expressed in the Assembly or votes cast in the
course of performing their duties as representatives.
Article 87:
The President must obtain, for
the Council of Ministers, after being formed and before all
other business, a vote of confidence from the Assembly.
During his incumbency, he can also seek a vote of confidence
for the Council of Ministers from the Assembly on important
and controversial issues.
Article 88:
Whenever at least one-fourth
of the total members of the Islamic Consultative Assembly
pose a question to the President, or any one member of the
Assembly poses a question to a minister on a subject
relating to their duties, the President or the minister is
obliged to attend the Assembly and answer the question. This
answer must not be delayed more than one month in the case
of the President and ten days in the case of the minister,
except with an excuse deemed reasonable by the Islamic
Consultative Assembly.
Article 89:
-
Members of the Islamic
Consultative Assembly can interpolate the Council of
Ministers or an individual minister in instances they
deem necessary. Interpolations can be tabled if they
bear the signatures of at least ten members. The Council
of Ministers or interpolated minister must be present in
the Assembly within ten days after the tabling of the
interpolation in order to answer it and seek a vote of
confidence. If the Council of Ministers or the minister
concerned fails to attend the Assembly, the members who
tabled the interpolation will explain their reasons, and
the Assembly will declare a vote of no- confidence if it
deems it necessary. If the Assembly does not pronounce a
vote of confidence, the Council of Ministers or the
minister subject to interpolation is dismissed. In both
cases, the ministers subject to interpolation cannot
become members of the next Council of Ministers formed
immediately afterwards.
-
In the event at least
one-third of the members of the Islamic Consultative
Assembly interpolate the President concerning his
executive responsibilities in relation with the
Executive Power and the executive affairs of the
country, the President must be present in the Assembly
within one month after the tabling of the interpolation
in order to give adequate explanations in regard to the
matters raised. In the event, after hearing the
statements of the opposing and favoring members and the
reply of the President, two-thirds of the members of the
Assembly declare a vote of no confidence, the same will
be communicated to the Leadership for information and
implementation of Section (10) of Article 110 of the
Constitution.
Article 90:
Whoever has a complaint
concerning the work of the Assembly or the executive power,
or the judicial power can forward his complaint in writing
to the Assembly. The Assembly must investigate his complaint
and give a satisfactory reply. In cases where the complaint
relates to the executive or the judiciary, the Assembly must
demand proper investigation in the matter and an adequate
explanation from them, and announce the results within a
reasonable time. In cases where the subject of the complaint
is of public interest, the reply must be made public.
Article 91:
With a view to safeguard the
Islamic ordinances and the Constitution, in order to examine
the compatibility of the legislation passed by the Islamic
Consultative Assembly with Islam, a council to be known as
the Guardian Council is to be constituted with the following
composition:
-
six 'adil fuqaha'
conscious of the present needs and the issues of the
day, to be selected by the Leader, and
-
six jurists, specializing
in different areas of law, to be elected by the Islamic
Consultative Assembly from among the Muslim jurists
nominated-by the Head of the Judicial Power.
Article 92:
Members of the Guardian
Council are elected to serve for a period of six years, but
during the first term, after three years have passed, half
of the members of each group will be changed by lot and new
members will be elected in their place.
Article 93:
The Islamic Consultative
Assembly does not hold any legal status if there is no
Guardian Council in existence, except for the purpose of
approving the credentials of its members and the election of
thee six jurists on the Guardian Council.
Article 94:
All legislation passed by the
Islamic Consultative Assembly must be sent to the Guardian
Council. The Guardian Council must review it within a
maximum of ten days from its receipt with a view to ensuring
its compatibility with the criteria of Islam and the
Constitution. If it finds the legislation incompatible, it
will return it to the Assembly for review. Otherwise the
legislation will be deemed enforceable.
Article 95:
In cases where the Guardian
Council deems ten days inadequate for completing the process
of review and delivering a definite opinion, it can request
the Islamic Consultative Assembly to grant an extension of
the time limit not exceeding ten days.
Article 96:
The determination of
compatibility of the legislation passed by the Islamic
Consultative Assembly with the laws of Islam rests with the
majority vote of the fuqaha' on the Guardian Council; and
the determination of its compatibility with the Constitution
rests with the majority of all the members of the Guardian
Council.
Article 97:
In order to expedite the work,
the members of the Guardian Council may attend the Assembly
and listen to its debates when a government bill or a
members' bill is under discussion. When an urgent government
or members' bill is placed on the agenda of the Assembly,
the members of the Guardian Council must attend the Assembly
and make their views known.
Article 98:
The authority of the
interpretation of the Constitution is vested with the
Guardian Council, which is to be done with the consent of
three-fourths of its members.
Article 99:
The Guardian Council has the
responsibility of supervising the elections of the Assembly
of Experts for Leadership, the President of the Republic,
the Islamic Consultative Assembly, and the direct recourse
to popular opinion and referenda.
Chapter VII: Councils
Article 100:
In order to expedite social,
economic, development, public health, cultural, and
educational programs and facilitate other affairs relating
to public welfare with the cooperation of the people
according to local needs, the administration of each
village, division, city, municipality, and province will be
supervised by a council to be named the Village, Division,
City, Municipality, or Provincial Council. Members of each
of these councils will be elected by the people of the
locality in question.
Qualifications for the eligibility of electors and
candidates for these councils, as well as their functions
and powers, the mode of election, the jurisdiction of these
councils, the hierarchy of their authority, will be
determined by law, in such a way as to preserve national
unity, territorial integrity, the system of the Islamic
Republic, and the sovereignty of the central government.
Article 101:
In order to prevent
discrimination in the preparation of programmes for the
development and welfare of the provinces, to secure the
cooperation of the people, and to arrange for the
supervision of coordinated implementation of such
programmes, a Supreme Council of, the Provinces will be
formed, composed of representatives of the Provincial
Councils.
Law will specify the manner in which this council is to be
formed and the functions that it is to fulfil.
Article 102:
The Supreme Council of the
Provinces has the right within its jurisdiction, to draft
bills and to submit them to the Islamic Consultative
Assembly, either directly or through the government. These
bills must be examined by the Assembly.
Article 103:
Provincial governors, city
governors, divisional governors, and other officials
appointed by the government must abide by all decisions
taken by the councils within their jurisdiction.
Article 104:
In order to ensure Islamic
equity and cooperation in chalking out the programmes and to
bring about the harmonious progress of all units of
production, both industrial and agricultural, councils
consisting of the representatives of the workers, peasants,
other employees, and managers, will be formed in educational
and administrative units, units of service industries, and
other units of a like nature, similar councils will be
formed, composed of representatives of the members of those
units.
The mode of the formation of these councils and the scope of
their 'functions and powers,~are t,o be specified by law.
Article 105:
Decisions taken by the
councils must not be contrary to the criteria of Islam and
the laws of the country.
Article 106:
The councils may not be
dissolved unless they deviate from their legal duties. The
body responsible for determining such deviation, as well as
the manner for dissolving the councils and re-forming them,
will be specified by law.
Should a council have any objection to its dissolution, it
has the right to appeal to a competent court, and the court
is duty-bound to examine its complaint outside the docket
sequence.
Chapter VIII: The Leader or
Leadership Council
Article 107:
After the demise of the
eminent marji' al-taqlid and great leader of the universal
Islamic revolution, and founder of the Islamic Republic of
Iran, Ayatullah al-'Uzma Imam Khumayni - quddisa sirruh
al-sharif - who was recognized and accepted as marji' and
Leader by a decisive majority of the people, the task of
appointing the Leader shall be vested with the experts
elected by the people. The experts will review and consult
among themselves concerning all the fuqaha' possessing the
qualifications specified in Articles 5 and 109. In the event
they find one of them better versed in Islamic regulations,
the subjects of the fiqh, or in political and social Issues,
or possessing general popularity or special prominence for
any of the qualifications mentioned in Article 109, they
shall elect him as the Leader. Otherwise, in the absence of
such a superiority, they shall elect and declare one of them
as the Leader. The Leader thus elected by the Assembly of
Experts shall assume all the powers of the wilayat al-amr
and all the responsibilities arising therefrom.
The Leader is equal with the rest of the people of the
country in the eyes of law.
Article 108:
The law setting out the number
and qualifications of the experts [mentioned in, the
preceding article], the mode of their election, and the code
of procedure regulating the sessions during the first term
must be drawn up by the fuqaha' on the first Guardian
Council, passed by a majority of votes and then finally
approved by the Leader of the Revolution. The power to make
any subsequent change or a review of this law, or approval
of all the provisions concerning the duties of the experts
is vested in themselves.
Article 109:
Following are the essential
qualifications and conditions for the Leader:
-
scholarship, as required
for performing the functions of mufti in different
fields of fiqh.
-
Justice and piety, as
required for the leadership of the Islamic Ummah.
-
right political and social
perspicacity, prudence, courage, administrative
facilities and adequate capability for leadership. In
case of multiplicity of persons fulfilling the above
qualifications and conditions, the person possessing the
better jurisprudential and political perspicacity will
be given preference.
Article 110:
Following are the duties and
powers of the Leadership:
-
Delineation of the general
policies of the Islamic Republic of Iran after
consultation with the Nation's Exigency Council.
-
Supervision over the
proper execution of the general policies of the system.
-
Issuing decrees for
national referenda.
-
Assuming supreme command
of the armed forces.
-
Declaration of war and
peace, and the mobilization of the armed forces.
-
Appointment, dismissal,
and acceptance of resignation of:
-
the fuqaha' on the
Guardian Council.
-
the supreme judicial
authority of the country.
-
the head of the radio
and television network of the Islamic Republic of
Iran.
-
the chief of the joint
staff.
-
the chief commander of
the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps.
-
the supreme commanders
of the armed forces.
-
Resolving differences
between the three wings of the armed forces and
regulation of their relations.
-
Resolving the problems,
which cannot be solved by conventional methods, through
the Nation's Exigency Council.
-
Signing the decree
formalizing the election of the President of the
Republic by the people. The suitability of candidates
for the Presidency of the Republic, with respect to the
qualifications specified in the Constitution, must be
confirmed before elections take place by the Guardian
Council; and, in the case of the first term [of the
Presidency], by the Leadership;
-
Dismissal of the'
President of the Republic, with due regard for the
interests of the country, after the Supreme Court holds
him guilty of the violation of his constitutional
duties, or after a vote of the Islamic Consultative
Assembly testifying to his incompetence on the basis of
Article 89 of the Constitution.
-
Pardoning or reducing the
sentences of convicts, within the framework of Islamic
criteria, on a recommendation [to that effect] from the
Head of judicial power. The Leader may delegate part of
his duties and powers to another person.
Article 111:
Whenever the Leader becomes
incapable of fulfilling his constitutional duties, or lobs
one of the qualifications mentioned in Articles 5 and 109,
or it becomes known that he did not possess some of the
qualifications initially, he will be dismissed. The
authority of determination in this matter is vested with the
experts specified in Article 108.
In the event of the death, or resignation or dismissal of
the Leader, the experts shall take steps within the shortest
possible time for the appointment of the new Leader. Till
the appointment of the new Leader, a council consisting of
the President, head of the judicial power, and a faqih from
the Guardian Council, upon the decision of the Nation's
Exigency Council, shall temporarily take over all the duties
of the Leader. In the event, during this period, any one of
them is unable to fulfil his duties for whatsoever reason,
another person, upon the decision of majority of fuqaha' in
the Nation's Exigency Council shall be elected in his place.
This council shall take action in respect of items 1,3,5,
and 10, and sections d,e and f of item 6 of Article 110,
upon the decision of three-fourths of the members of the
Nation's Exigency Council.
Whenever the Leader becomes temporarily unable to perform
the duties of leadership owing to his illness or any other
incident, then during this period, the council mentioned in
this Article shall assume his duties.
Article 112:
Upon the order of the Leader,
the Nation's Exigency Council shall meet at any time the
Guardian Council judges a proposed bill of the Islamic
Consultative Assembly to be against the principles of
Shariah or the Constitution, and the Assembly is 'unable to
meet the expectations of the Guardian Council. Also, the
Council shall meet for consideration on any issue forwarded
to it by the Leader and shall carry out any other
responsibility as mentioned in this Constitution.
The permanent and changeable members of the Council shall be
appointed by the Leader. The rules for the Council shall be
formulated and approved by the Council members subject to
the confirmation by the Leader.
Chapter IX: The Executive
Power
Article 113:
After the office of
Leadership, the President is the highest official in the
country. His is the responsibility for implementing the
Constitution and acting as the head of the executive, except
in matters directly concerned with (the office of) the
Leadership.
Article 114:
The President is elected for a
four-year term by the direct vote of the people. His
re-election for a successive term is permissible only once.
Article 115:
The President must be elected
from among religious and political personalities possessing
the following qualifications:
Iranian origin; Iranian nationality; administrative capacity
and resourcefulness; a good past-record; trustworthiness and
piety; convinced belief in the fundamental principles of the
Islamic Republic of Iran and the official madhhab of the
country.
Article 116:
Candidates nominated for the
post of President must declare their candidature officially.
Law lays down the manner in which the President is to be
elected.
Article 117:
The President is elected by an
absolute majority of votes polled by the voters. But if none
of the candidates is able to win such a majority In the
first round, voting will take place a second time on Friday
of the following week. In the second round only the two
candidates who received greatest number of votes in the
first round will participate. If, however, some of the
candidates securing greatest votes in the first round
withdraw from the elections, the final choice will be
between the two candidates who won greater number of votes
than all the remaining candidates.
Article 117:
The President is elected by an
absolute majority of votes polled by the voters. But if none
of the candidates is able to win such a majority In the
first round, voting will take place a second time on Friday
of the following week. In the second round only the two
candidates who received greatest number of votes in the
first round will participate. If, however, some of the
candidates securing greatest votes in the first round
withdraw from the elections, the final choice will be
between the two candidates who won greater number of votes
than all the remaining candidates.
Article 118:
Responsibility for the
supervision of the election, of the President lies with the
Guardian Council, as stipulated in Article 99. But before
the establishment of the first Guardian Council, however, it
lies with a supervisory body to be constituted by law.
Article 119:
The election of a new
President must take place no later than one month before the
end of the term of the outgoing President. In the interim
period before the election of the new President and the end
of the term of the outgoing President, the outgoing
President will perform the duties of the, President.
Article 120:
In case any of the candidates
whose suitability is established in terms of the
qualifications listed above should die within ten days
before polling day, the elections will be postponed for two
weeks. If one of the candidates securing greatest number of
votes dies in the intervening period between the first and
second rounds of voting, the period for holding (the second
round of) the election will be extended for two weeks.
Article 121:
The President must take the
following oath and affix his signature to it at a session of
the Islamic Consultative Assembly in the presence of the
head of the judicial power and the members of the Guardian
Council:
In, the Name of God, the
Compassionate, the Merciful, I, as President, swear, in
the presence of the Noble Qur'an and the people of Iran,
by God, the Exalted and Almighty, that I will guard the
official religion of the country, the order of the
Islamic Republic and the Constitution of the country;
that I will devote all my capacities and abilities to
the fulfillment of the responsibilities that I have
assumed; that I will dedicate myself to the service of
the people, the honor of the country, the propagation of
religion and morality, and the support of truth and
justice, refraining from every kind of arbitrary
behavior; that I will protect the freedom and dignity of
all citizens and the rights that the Constitution has
accorded the people; that in guarding the frontiers and
the political, economic, and cultural independence of
the country I will not shirk any necessary measure;
that, seeking help from God and following the Prophet of
Islam and the infallible Imams (peace be upon them), I
will guard, as a pious and selfless trustee, the
authority vested in me by the people as a sacred trust,
and transfer it to whomever the people may elect after
me.
Article 122:
The President, within the
limits of his powers and duties, which he has by virtue of
this Constitution or other laws, is responsible to the
people, the Leader and the Islamic Consultative Assembly.
Article 123:
The President is obliged to
sign legislation approved by the Assembly or the result of a
referendum, after the (related) legal procedures have been
completed and it has been communicated to him. After
signing, he must forward it to the responsible authorities
for implementation.
Article 124:
The President may have
deputies for the performance of his constitutional duties.
With the approval of the President, the first deputy of the
President shall be vested with the responsibilities of
administering the affairs of the Council of Ministers and
coordination of functions of other deputies.
Article 125:
The President or his legal
representative has the authority to sign treaties,
protocols, contracts, and agreements concluded by the
Iranian government with other governments, as well as
agreements pertaining to international organizations, after
obtaining the approval of the Islamic Consultative Assembly.
Article 126:
The President is responsible
for national planning and budget and state employment
affairs and may entrust the administration of these to
others.
Article 127:
In special circumstances,
subject to approval of the Council of Ministers the
President may appoint one or more special representatives
with specific powers. In such cases, the decisions of his
representative(s) will be considered as tee same as those of
the President and the Council of Ministers.
Article 128:
The ambassadors shall be
appointed upon the recommendation of the foreign minister
and approval of the President. The President signs the
credentials of ambassadors and receives the credentials
presented by the ambassadors ,of the foreign countries.
Article 129:
The award of state decorations
is a prerogative of the President.
Article 130:
The President shall submit his
resignation to the Leader and shall continue performing his
duties until his resignation is not accepted.
Article 131:
In case of death, dismissal,
resignation, absence, or illness lasting longer than two
months of the President, or when his term in office has
ended and a new president has not been elected due to some
impediments, or similar other circumstances, his first
deputy shall assume, with the approval of the Leader, the
powers and functions of the President. The Council,
consisting of the Speaker of the Islamic Consultative
Assembly, head, of the judicial power, and the first deputy
of the President, is obliged to arrange for a new President
to be elected within a maximum period of fifty days. In case
of death of the first deputy to the President, or other
matters which prevent him to perform his duties, or when the
President does not have a first deputy, the Leader shall
appoint another person in his place.
Article 132:
During the period when the
powers and responsibilities of the President are assigned to
his first deputy or the other person in accordance with
Article 131, neither can the ministers be interpolated nor
can a vote of no-confidence be passed against them.
Also,neither can any step be undertaken for a review of the
Constitution, nor a national referendum be held.
Article 133:
Ministers will be appointed by
the President and will be presented to the Assembly for a
vote of confidence. With the change of Assembly, a new vote
of confidence will not be necessary. The number of ministers
and the jurisdiction of each will be determined by law.
Article 134:
The President is the head of
the Council of Ministers. He supervises the work of the
ministers and takes all necessary measures to coordinate the
decisions of the government. With the cooperation of the
ministers, he determines the programme and policies of the
government and implements the laws.
In the case of discrepancies, or interferences in the
constitutional duties of the government agencies, the
decision of the Council of Ministers at the request of the
President shall be binding provided it does not call for an
interpretation of or modification in the laws.
The President is responsible to the Assembly for the actions
of the Council of Ministers.
Article 135:
The ministers shall continue
in office unless they are dismissed, or given a vote of
no-confidence by the Assembly as a result of their
interpolation, or a motion for a vote of no- confidence
against them.
The resignation of the Council of Ministers, or that of each
of them shall be submitted to the President, and the Council
of Ministers shall continue to function until such time as
the new government is appointed.
The President can appoint a caretaker for a maximum period
of three months for the ministries having no minister.
Article 136:
The President can dismiss the
ministers and in such a case he must obtain a vote of
confidence for the new minister(s) from the Assembly. In
case half of the members of the Council of Ministers are
changed after the government has received its vote of
confidence from the Assembly, the government must seek a
fresh vote of confidence from the Assembly.
Article 137:
Each of the ministers is
responsible for his duties to the President and the
Assembly, but in meters approved by the Council of Ministers
as a whole, he is also responsible for the actions of the
others.
Article 138:
In addition to instances in
which the Council of Ministers or a single minister is
authorized to frame procedures for the implementation of
laws, the Council of Ministers has the right to lay down
rules, regulations, and procedures for performing its
administrative duties, ensuring the implementation of laws,
and setting up administrative bodies. Each of the ministers
also has the right to frame regulations and issue circular
in matters within his jurisdiction and in conformity with
the decisions of the Council of Ministers. However, the
content of all such regulations must not violate the letter
or the spirit of the law.
The government can entrust any portion of its task to the
commissions composed of some ministers. The decisions of
such commissions within the rules will be binding after the
endorsement of the President.
The ratification and the regulations of the government and
the decisions of the commissions mentioned under this
Article shall also be brought to the notice of the Speaker
of the Islamic Consultative Assembly while being
communicated for implementation so that in the event he
finds them contrary to law, he may send the same stating the
reason for reconsideration by the Council of Ministers.
Article 139:
The settlement, of claims
relating to public and state property or the referral
thereof to arbitration is in every case dependent on the
approval of the Council of Ministers, and the Assembly must
be informed of these matters. In cases where one party to
the dispute is a foreigner, as well as in important cases
that are purely domestic, the approval of the Assembly must
also be obtained. Law will specify the important cases
intended here.
Article 140:
Allegations of common crimes
against the President, his deputies, and the ministers will
be investigated in common courts of justice with the'
knowledge of the Islamic Consultative Assembly.
Article 141:
The President, the deputies to
the President, ministers, and government employees cannot
hold more than one government position, and it is forbidden
for them to hold any kind of additional post in institutions
of which all or a part of the capital belongs to the
government or public institutions, to be a member of the
Islamic Consultative Assembly, to practice the profession of
attorney or legal adviser, or to hold the post of president,
managing director, or membership of the board of directors
of any kind of private company, with the exception of
cooperative companies affiliated to the government
departments and institutions.
Teaching positions in universities and research institutions
are exempted from this rule.
Article 142:
The assets of the Leader, the
President, the deputies to the President, and ministers, as
well as those of their spouses and offspring, are to be
examined before and after their term of office by the head
of the judicial power, in order to ensure they have not
increased in a fashion contrary to law.
Article 143:
The Army of the Islamic
Republic of Iran is responsible for guarding the
independence and territorial integrity of the country, as
well as the order of the Islamic Republic.
Article 144:
The Army of the Islamic
Republic of Iran must be an Islamic Army, i.e., committed to
Islamic ideology and the people, and must recruit into its
service individuals who have faith in the objectives of the
Islamic Revolution and are devoted to the cause of realizing
its goals.
Article 145:
No foreigner will be accepted
into the Army or security forces of the country.
Article 146:
The establishment of any kind
of foreign military base in Iran, even for peaceful
purposes, is forbidden.
Article 147:
In time of peace, the
government must utilize the personnel and technical
equipment of the Army in relief operations, and for
educational and productive ends, and the Construction Jihad,
while fully observing the criteria of Islamic justice and
ensuring that such utilization does not harm the
combat-readiness of the Army.
Article 148:
All forms of personal use of
military vehicles, equipment, and other means, as well as
taking advantage of Army personnel as personal servants and
chauffeurs or in similar capacities, are forbidden.
Article 149:
Promotions in military rank
and their withdrawal take place in accordance with the law.
Article 150:
The Islamic Revolution Guards
Corps, organized in the early days of the triumph of the
Revolution, is to be maintained so that it may continue in
its role of guarding the Revolution and its achievements.
The scope of the duties of this Corps, and its areas of
responsibility, in relation to the duties and areas of
responsibility of the other armed forces, are to be
determined by law, with emphasis on brotherly cooperation
and harmony among them.
Article 151:
In accordance with the noble
Qur'anic verse:
(Prepare against them
whatever force you are able to muster, and horses ready
for battle, striking fear into God's enemy and your
enemy, and others beyond them unknown to you but known
to God... [8:60]).
The government is oblige to provide a programme of military
training, with all requisite facilities, fob all its
citizens, in accordance with the Islamic criteria, in such a
way that all citizens will always be able to engage in the
armed defence of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The
possession of arms, however, requires the granting of
permission by the competent authorities.
Chapter X: Foreign Policy
Article 152:
The foreign policy of the
Islamic Republic of Iran is based upon the rejection of all
forms of domination, both the exertion of it and submission
to it, the preservation of the independence of the country
in all respects and its territorial integrity, the defence
of the rights of all Muslims, non-alignment with respect to
the hegemonist superpowers, and the maintenance of mutually
peaceful relations with all non-belligerent States.
Article 153:
Any form of agreement
resulting in foreign control over the natural resources,
economy, army, or culture of the country, as well as other
aspects of the national life, is forbidden.
Article 154:
The Islamic Republic of Iran
has as its ideal human felicity throughout human society,
and considers the attainment of independence, freedom, and
rule of justice and truth to be the right of all people of
the world. Accordingly, while scrupulously refraining from
all forms of interference in the internal affairs of other
nations, it supports the just struggles of the mustad'afun
against the mustakbirun in every corner of the globe.
Article 155:
The government of the Islamic
Republic of Iran may grant political asylum to those who
seek it unless they are regarded as traitors and saboteurs
according to the laws of Iran.
Chapter XI: The Judiciary
Article 156:
The judiciary is an
independent power, the protector of the rights of the
individual and society, responsible for the implementation
of justice, and entrusted with the following duties:
-
investigating and passing
judgement on grievances, violations of rights, and
complaints; the resolving of litigation; the settling of
disputes; and the taking of all necessary decisions and
measures in probate matters as the law may determine;
-
restoring public rights
and promoting justice and legitimate freedoms;
-
supervising the proper
enforcement of laws;
-
uncovering crimes;
prosecuting, punishing, and chastising criminals; and
enacting the penalties and provisions of the Islamic
penal code;
-
taking suitable measures
to prevent the occurrence of crime and to reform
criminals.
Article 157:
In order to fulfil the
responsibilities of the judiciary power in all the matters
concerning judiciary, administrative and executive areas,
the Leader shall appoint a just Mujtahid well versed in
judiciary affairs and possessing prudence. and
administrative abilities as the head of the judiciary power
for a period of five years who shall be the highest judicial
authority.
Article 158:
The head of the judiciary
branch is responsible for the following:
-
Establishment of the
organizational structure necessary for the
administration of justice commensurate with the
responsibilities mentioned under Article 156.
-
Drafting judiciary bills
appropriate for the Islamic Republic.
-
Employment of just and
worthy judges, their dismissal, appointment, transfer,
assignment to particular duties, promotions, and
carrying out similar administrative duties, in
accordance with the law.
Article 159:
The courts of justice are the
official bodies to which all grievances and complaints are
to be referred. The formation of courts and their
jurisdiction is to be determined by law.
Article 160:
The Minister of Justice owes
responsibility in all matters concerning the relationship
between the judiciary, on the one hand, and the executive
and legislative branches, on the other hand. He will be
elected from among the individuals proposed to the President
by the head of the judiciary branch.
The head of the judiciary may delegate full authority to the
Minister of Justice in financial and administrative areas
and for employment of personnel other than judges in which
case the Minister of Justice shall have the same authority
and responsibility as those possessed by the other ministers
in their capacity as the highest ranking government
executives.
Article 161:
The Supreme Court is to be
formed for the purpose of supervising the correct
implementation of the laws by the courts, ensuring
uniformity of judicial procedure, and fulfilling any other
responsibilities assigned to it by law, on the basis of
regulations to be established by the head of the judicial
branch.
Article 162:
The chief of the Supreme Court
and the Prosecutor-General must both be just mujtahids well
versed in judicial matters. They will be nominated by the
head of the judiciary branch for a period of five years, in
consultation with the judges of the Supreme Court.
Article 163:
The conditions and
qualifications to be fulfilled by a judge will be determined
by law, in accordance with the criteria of fiqh.
Article 164:
A judge cannot be removed,
whether temporarily or permanently, from the post he
occupies except by trial and proof of his guilt, or in
consequence of a violation entailing his dismissal. A judge
cannot be transferred or redesignated without his consent,
except in cases when the interest of society necessitates
it, that too, with the decision of the head of the judiciary
branch after consultation with the chief of the Supreme
Court and the Prosecutor General. The periodic transfer and
rotation of judges will be in accordance with general
regulations to be laid down by law.
Article 165:
Trials are to be held openly
and members of the public may attend without any
restriction; unless the court determines that an open trial
would be detrimental to public morality or discipline, or if
in case of private disputes, both the parties request not to
hold open hearing.
Article 166:
The verdicts of courts must be
well reasoned out and documented with reference to the
articles and principles of the law in accordance with which
they are delivered.
Article 167:
The judge is bound to endeavor
to judge each case on the basis of the codified law. In case
of the absence of any such law, he has to deliver his
judgement on the basis of authoritative Islamic sources and
authentic fatawa. He, on the pretext of the silence of or
deficiency of law in the matter, or its brevity or
contradictory nature, cannot refrain from admitting and
examining cases and delivering his judgement.
Article 168:
Political and press offenses
will be tried openly and in the presence of a jury, in
courts of justice. The manner of the selection of the jury,
its powers, and the definition of political offenses, will
be determined by law in accordance with the Islamic
criteria.
Article 169:
No act or omission may be
regarded as a crime with retrospective effect on the basis
of a law framed subsequently.
Article 170:
Judges of courts are obliged
to refrain from executing statutes and regulations of the
government that are in conflict with the laws or the norms
of Islam, or lie outside the competence of,the executive
power. Everyone has the right to demand the annulment of any
such regulation from the Court of Administrative Justice.
Article 171:
Whenever an individual suffers
moral or material loss as the result of a default or error
of the judge with respect to the subject matter of a case or
the verdict delivered, or the application of a rule in a
particular case, the defaulting judge must stand surety for
the reparation of that loss in accordance with the Islamic
criteria, if it be a case of default. Otherwise, losses will
be compensated for by the State. In all such cases, the
repute and good standing of the accused will be restored.
Article 172:
Military courts will be
established by law to investigate crimes committed in
connection with military or security duties by members of
the Army, the Gendarmerie, the police, and the Islamic
Revolution Guards Corps. They will be tried in public
courts, however, for common crimes or crimes committed while
serving the department of justice in executive capacity. The
office of military prosecutor and the military courts form
part of the judiciary and are subject to the same principles
that regulate the judiciary.
Article 173:
In order to investigate the
complaints, grievances, and objections of the people with
respect to government officials, organs, and statutes, a
court will be established to be known as the Court of
Administrative Justice under the supervision of the head of
the judiciary branch. The jurisdiction, powers, and mode of
operation of this court will be laid down by law.
Article 174:
In accordance with the right
of the judiciary to supervise the proper conducting of
affairs and the correct implementation of laws by the
administrative organs of the government, an organization I
will be constituted under the supervision of the head of the
judiciary branch to be known as the National General
Inspectorate. The powers and duties of this organization
will be determined by law.
Chapter XII: Radio and
Television
Article 175:
The freedom of expression and
dissemination of thoughts in the Radio and Television of the
Islamic Republic of Iran must be guaranteed in keeping with
the Islamic' criteria and the best interests of the country.
The appointment and dismissal of the head of the Radio and
Television of the Islamic Republic of Iran rests with the
Leader. A council consisting of two representatives each of
the President, the head of the judiciary branch and the
Islamic Consultative Assembly shall supervise the
functioning of this organization.
The policies and the manner of managing the organization and
its supervision will be determined by law.
Chapter XIII: Supreme Council
for National Security
Article 176:
In order to safeguarding the
national interests and preserving the Islamic Revolution,
the territorial integrity and national sovereignty, a
Supreme Council for National Security presided over by the
President shall be constituted to fulfil the following
responsibilities:
-
Determining the defence
and national security policies within the framework of
general policies determined by the Leader.
-
Coordination of activities
in the areas relating to politics, intelligence, social,
cultural and economic fields in regard to general
defence and security policies.
-
Exploitation of
materialistic and intellectual resources of the country
for facing the internal and external threats.
The Council shall consist of: heads of three branches of the
government, chief of the Supreme Command Council of the
Armed Forces, the officer in charge of the planning and
budget affairs, two representatives nominated by the Leader,
ministers of foreign affairs, interior, and information, a
minister related with the subject, and the highest ranking
officials from the Armed Forces and the Islamic Revolution's
Guards Corps.
Commensurate with its duties, the Supreme Council for
National Security shall form sub-councils such as Defence
Sub-council and National Security Sub-council. Each
Sub-council will be presided over by the President or a
member of the Supreme Council for National Security
appointed by the President.
The scope of authority and responsibility of the
Sub-councils will be determined by law and their
organizational structure will be approved by the Supreme
Council for National Defence.
The decisions of the Supreme Council for National Security
shall be effective after the confirmation by the Leader.
Chapter XIV: The Revision of
the Constitution
Article 177:
The revision of the
Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran, whenever
needed by the circumstances, will be done in the following
manner:
The Leader issues an edict to the President after
consultation with the Nation's Exigency Council stipulating
the amendments or additions to be made by the Council for
Revision of the Constitution which consists of:
-
Members of the Guardian
Council.
-
Heads of the three
branches of the government.
-
Permanent members of the
Nation's Exigency Council.
-
Five members from among
the Assembly of Experts.
-
Ten representatives
selected by the Leader.
-
Three representatives from
the Council of Ministers.
-
Three representatives from
the judiciary branch.
-
Ten representatives from
among the members of the Islamic Consultative Assembly.
-
Three representatives from
among the university professors.
The method of working, manner of selection and the terms and
conditions of the Council shall be determined by law.
The decisions of the Council, after the confirmation and
signatures of the Leader, shall be valid if approved by an
absolute majority vote in a national referendum.
The provisions of Article 59 of the Constitution shall not
apply to the referendum for the, "Revision of the
Constitution."
The contents of the Articles of the Constitution related to
the Islamic character of the political system; the basis of
all the rules and regulations according to Islamic criteria;
the religious footing; the objectives of the Islamic
Republic of Iran; the democratic character of the
government; the wilayat al-'mr the Imamate of Ummah; and the
administration of the affairs of the country based on
national referenda, official religion of Iran [Islam] and
the school [Twelver Ja'fari] are unalterable.
Some of Islamic Sources of the
Constitution:
Following are some of the Qur'anic verses and ahadith which
served as source of inspiration for the makers of the
Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Chapter III: Rights of the
people
(1) ...Allah, glory be to
Him, has given me, in my capacity as the guardian of
your affairs (wilayat al'amr), a right over you.
Similarly, He has given you a right over me. The issue
of rights is the vastest of subjects for discussion and
description; but the rights themselves are the narrowest
of things when it comes to sharing them equally They do
not accrue in one's favour without accruing against him,
and do not accrue against in without accruing in his
favour. (Nahj al-balaghah, Khutab, No. 216)
(2) For me the weak is
strong so long as I have not obtained his right for him,
and the powerful is weak so long as I have not wrested
from him the rights of others. (Nahi al-balaghah,
Khutab, No. 37)
(3) Never overlook the
rights of your brother on account of your terms (of
fraternity) with him; for if you overlook his rights, he
is not your brother (i.e., do not weaken the tie of
brotherhood by exploiting it). (Nahj al-balaghah, Kutub,
No. 31)
Article 14: Human rights and
treatment of non-Muslims
(1) Cultivate in your
heart the feeling of compassion for the people
(ra'iyyah) and affection and kindness towards them.
Never treat them like a predatory beast intent on
devouring its prey; because they are of two kinds: eiher
your brethren in faith, or your fellowmen in kind. (Nahj
al-balaghah, Khutab, No. 53)
(2) God forbids you not as
regards those (non-Muslims) who have not fought you in
religion's cause, nor expelled you from your habitation,
that you should be kindly to them, and act justly
towards them; surely God loves the just .(60:8)
Article 19: Equality
(1) O mankind. We have
created you male and female, and made you races and made
you races and tribes, that you may know one another.
Surely, the noblest among you in the sight of God is the
most God-fearing of you. (49:13)
(2) O mankind, your Lord
is one and you have descended from one ancestor . the
Arab, neither a black-skinned man over the red-skinned,
nor the red-skinned over the black-skinned - except on
account of piety. (The Prophet's hadith, from
al-Qurtubi. Tafsir al-Qur'an, vol. 16 p. 342).
Articles 20,21: On women
(1) And of His signs is
that He created for you spousesof yoyrselves, that you
might repose in them, and He has set between you love
and mercy... (30:21)
(2) And whoever does a
right deed, be it male or female, believing, We shall
recompense them their wages according to the beast of
what they do.
(3) ... Women have such
honourable rights as obligations, but their men have a
degree above them... (2:228)
(4) Do not charge women
with matters beyond that which personally concerns them;
for woman is a flower, not to be burdened with
administrative duties. (Nahi al-balaghah, Kutub, No 31
Articles 22, 28: Freedom
Do not make yourself a
slave of anyone when God has made you free. (Nahi
al-balaghah, Kutub, No.31)
Article 34: Judicial justice
And spare a part of your
time for the complainants, wherein you sit for them at
public audience, and bear yourself with humity therin
for the sake of God, Who created you. (On such
occasions) you should dismiss your troops, assistants,
guards, and policemen, so that anyone who wishes to
speak may do so without fear. I have heard the Apostle
of God (S) say more than once that God would not bless a
people among whom the rights of the weak are not wrested
from the strong without trepidation. (Nahi al-balaghah,
Kutub, No. 53)
Article 40: The
impermissibility of imposing loss or injury on anyone
...and the Prophet (S)
gave his judgement, saying, " inflicting loss or injury
(on someone or causing (someone) to endure with an
injury or loss are not (legitimate in Islam)". (Wasa'il
al-Shi'ah, Shufah, Shufah, Bab 2)
Articles 4,72,91,105,170:
Obedience
(1) O believers, obey God,
and obey the Messenger and those in . Refer it to God
and the Messenger, if you believe in God and the Last
Day ... (4:59)
(2) ...And whoso judges
not according to what God has sent down -- they are the
unbelievers. (5:44)
(3) ...And whoso judges
not according to what God has sent down - they are the
unjust. (5:45)
(4) ...And whoso judges
not according to what God has sent down-- they are the
corrupt. (5:47)
(5) ...The judgement is
God's alone... (6:57)
(6) ...Whosoever
transgresses the bounds of God those are the unjust.
(2:229)
(7) There is no
(legitimacy in) obedience to a creature when it requires
disobedience to the Creator. (Nahj al-balaghah, Hikam,
No. 165)
Article 8: Al.'Amr bi al-maruf
wa al-nahy an al-munkar
(1) And the believers, the
men and the women, are friends of one another, they bid
to honour, and forbid dishonour ...(:71)
(2) Let there be one
nation of you, calling to good, and for bidding dish on
our ...(3:104)
Article: The duty to adopt
what is best
...So give you good
tidings to My servants, who give ear to the Word and
follow the fairest (meaning) of it ... (39:17,18)
Article 3: Negation of
hardship (usr) and impediment (haraj), and the waiver of
constraint (idtirar)
(1)... God desires ease
for you, and desires not hardship for you... (2:185)
(2)... and He laid no
impediment in your religion... (22:78)
(3)... God does not desire
to make any impediment for you... (5:6)
(4)... Yet whoso is
constrained, not revolting nor transgressing, no sin
shall be upon him... (2:173)
Chapter IV: Economy, property,
land, and resources
(1) But do not give to
fools your property that God has assigned .
(2) O believers, consume
not your property between yourselves illegitimately,
except through trade through mutual agreement... (4:29)
(30) it is He Who created
for you all that is in the earth... (2.29)
(4) O men, eat of what is
in the earth lawful and good... (2:168)
(5) They question thee
concerning the anfal. Say the anfal belong to God and
the Messenger,... (8:1)
(6) Al-Imam Musa ibn Jafar
(A) said: "The anfal include: all lands laid waste whose
inhabitants have also perished, lands which are not
acquired by military conquest but are surrendered
peacefully. To him (i.e. the Prophet or the head of the
Islamic State) belong mountains, valleys, forests, and
all lands untilled and without owners, the lands of
(dethroned) kings which were in their possession but
were not seized from others (everything usurped is
returned to its original owner), and he inherits
everyone who dies without leaving an heir." (Wasail
al-Shiah, al-Anfal, Bab 1)
(7) Muhammad ibn Sinan
relates from Abu al-Hasan (A) that when asked about (the
owner ship of) water (resources) of valleys, he said:
The Muslims jointly share the ownership of water, fire
and pasture." (Wasa'il al-Shiah, Ihya al-amwat, Bab 5)
(8) Do not appropriate to
yourself that in which all the people have an equal
share. (Nahi al-balaghah, Kutub, No. 53)
(9) This property is
neither yours nor mine, but it is the collective
property of Muslims, acquired by their swords. If you
had taken part with them in their battle, you would have
had a share equal to theirs, otherwise the earnings of
their hands cannot be morsels for others' mouths. (Nahj
al- balaghah, No.232)
(10)... Surely the earth a
God's and He bequeaths it to whom He will... (7:128)
(11) Al-Sakuni related
from Abu Abd Allah (A) that the Prophet (S) said,
"Whoever is the first to plant a tree or dig a valley,
there being nobody to do so before him and thereby
revives a piece of waste land, it belongs to him. This
is a judgement of God and His Messenger". (Wasail al-
Shiah, Ihya al-amwat, Bab 2)
(12) Muhammad ibn Muslim
related from Abu Jafar that he said: "Whoever revives a
piece of waste land and makes it habitable, . Bab 1)
(13) Yunus related from
al-Abd al-Salih (al-Imam Musa ibn Jafar) (A) that he
said: "The land is a bequest of God to human beings, so
whoever leaves a land unworked for three consecutive
years without any cause, it is taken away from him and
given to another". (Wasail al-Shiah Ihya al-amwat, Bab
17)
Article 43: Concentration of
wealth
(1) No indeed; surely man
waxes insolent, when he considers himself rich. (96:6,7)
(2 Whatsoever spoils of
war God has given to His Messenger from the people of
the cities belong to God, and His Messenger, and the
near kinsmen, orphans, the need and the traveller, so
that it be not a thing to rotate among the rich of
you... (59:7)
(3)... Those who treasure
up gold and silver, and do not expend them in the way of
God - give them the good tidings of a painful
chastisement. (9:34)
(4) Give up lavishness and
be moderate, Remember tomorrow while it is today. Hold
back from the funds what you need and keep the balance
for the day of need. (Nahj al-balaghah, Kutub, No. 21)
Article 32: The prohibition on
hoarding
(1) The procurer is well
provided and the hoarder is cursed [by God]. Wasa'il
al-Shiah, Adab al-tijarah. Bab 27)
(2) ... Nevertheless,
remember that most of them (merchants) are atrociously
tight-fisted and shamefully stingy. They hoard to
profiteer and sell at arbitrary Prices. This is a source
of harm to the public and a blot on the administrators.
Prohibit hoarding, for the Prophet (S) also forbade it,
so that trading may take place freely and in accordance
with the criteria of justice, at prices which are not
unfair to the seller and the buyer. But if someone
commits hoarding after your prohibiting it, give him
exemplary punishment, though without exceeding the
limits of moderation. (Nahj al-balaghah, Kutub, No.53)
Article 43: Usury
(1) Those who devour usury
do not stand but like one who has been made sick,
possessed by the Devil; that is because they say,
'indeed trade [too] is like usury', whereas God has
permitted trade and prohibited usury. (2:75)
(2) O believers, fear you
God; and give up the out-standing . informed of the
declaration of war (against you) by God and His
Messenger, yet if you repent, you shall have your
principal, neither you shall suffer nor inflict
injustice. (2:278,279)
(3) Ali (A) said: "The
Apostle of Allah (S) has cursed all five involved in a
usurious transaction: the creditor, the debtor, the two
witnesses, and the one who records the transaction".
(Wasail al-Shiah, Riba, Bab 4)
Article 43: Extravagance and
wastage
(1) ... And eat and
drink,, but do not be extravagant. (7:31)
(2) ... And never
squander; the squanderers are brothers of Satans... (17:
26,27)
Article 45: Reclamation of
usurped public property
At the time of restoring
to public ownership the estates granted by 'Uthman', Ali
(A) said: "By God, even if I had found that with such
property women have been married or slave-maids have
been purchased I would still have restored it. Indeed
there is enough room in justice (to accommodate the
interests of all), and one who feels constrained by
justice will feel even more constrained by injustice".
(Nahj al-balaghah, Khutab, No. 15)
Articles 5, 109, 115: The
qualifications required for leadership
(1) ... And which is
worthier to be followed -- He Who guides to the truth,
or he who guides not unless he is guided. What then ails
you, how you judge? (10:35)
(2) ... God has chosen him
over you, and increased him broadly in knowledge and
body ... (2:247)
(3) Indeed God has made it
obligatory upon just leaders that they should maintain
themselves at the level of the impoverished class. (Nahj
al-balaghah, Khutab, No.209)
(4) Al-Imam al-Husayn (A):
"The administration of the affairs (of the Muslim
community) lies in the hands of those who are
knowledgeable about God and trustees of His halal and
haram". (Tuhaf al-uqul)
(5) It is not proper that
he who is in charge of the honour, life, law, and
leadership of the Muslim community should be avaricious;
otherwise he will eye their property . them on a account
of his ignorance. He should not be rude and coarse, or
would estrange them on account of his rudeness. He
should not misappropriate their wealth, favouring one
group and denying others, He should not take bribes as a
judge, or he will violate the rights of the people and
give judgements which violate the Divine commands.
(Lastly), he should not be such as one who suspends the
Sunnah (of the Prophet) thus leading the Ummah to
destruction. (Nahj al-balaghah, Khutab, No. 131)
(6) The Prophet said:
"There never has been a nation which made someone its
leader while there was a more learned person in its
midst, but that it underwent steady decline, unless that
it corrected its mistake". (Kitab Sulaym ibn Qays)
(7) The best of God's
servants in His sight is a just leader who is himself
rightly guided and guides others rightly. He establishes
the familiar and well-known Sunnah (of the Prophet) and
expunges unfamiliar innovations. (Nahj al-balaghah,
Khutab, No. 164)
(8) But what made me
concerned was that the affairs of this community should
fall into the hands of incompetent men and debauchees,
who would grab the public property (mal Allah) as their
own, take the servants of God for their slaves, declare
a war against the righteous of the community, making the
vicious their allies. (Nahj al balaghah, Kutub, No. 62)
(9) No one can establish
the rule of God except he who does not compromise
(regarding his duties), does not seek to conform with
others (at the cost of Islamic principles), and is not
after ambitions and desires. (Nahj al-balaghah, Hikam,
No. 110)
(10) The Prophet said:
When your rulers are righteous, when your rich are
generous, and when your affairs are decided through
consultation, then life would be better for you than
death; but if the wicked among you are your rulers, when
the wealthy among you are misers, and when your affairs
are in the hands of your women, then you would be better
of dead than alive". (Tuhaf al-uqul)
Article 6,7: Consultation
(Shura)
(1) ... And consult with
them in affairs ...(3:159)
(2) ... And their affairs
are (decided) through consultation among them ... 42:38)
(3) ... Own who acts in a
self-willed manner comes to grief, but the one who
consults others partakes in their understanding. (Nahj
al-balaghah, Hikam, No. 161)
Chapter IX, Section 2:
Ministers and officials
(1) The worst minister for
you is he who has been a minister to vicious (governors)
before you and who has collaborated with them in sins.
So don't make him your confidant, for such are helpers
of sinners and in fraternity with oppressors. You can
find good substitutes who would be as sound in views and
influence, without their encumbering sin and vices,
those who never assisted an oppressor in his oppression
nor a sinner in his sins. (Nahj al-balaghah, Kutub,
(2) Then look into the
affairs of your executives. Appoint them after testing
and examining, not arbitrarily or on account of
favouritism, for favouritism and arbitrariness are
common sources of two evils: injustice and treason.
Select from among them those who possess experience and
modesty, from virtuous families and with a longer past
in the Islamic faith. (Nahj al-balaghah, Kutub, No. 53)
(3) Your assignment is not
a bait but a trust lying on your neck. (Nahj
al-balaghah, Kutub, No. 5)
Chapter IX, Section 3: Army
and military power
(1) Make ready for them
whatever force and strings of horses you can, to terrify
thereby the enemy of God and your enemy, and others
besides them that you know not: God knows them ...
98:60)
(2) The army, with the
permission of God, is the fortress of the people, the
ornament of the rulers, the strength of the faith, and
the means of security. The strength of the people cannot
be maintained without it. (Nahj al-balaghah, Kutub, No.
53)
Article 153: Foreign influence
... And God will not grant
the unbelievers any way of domination) over the
believers. (4:14)
Article 154: The duty to
assist the oppressed
Be enemies of the
oppressors and helpers of the oppressed (Nahj
al-balaghah, Kutub, No 47)
Chapter XI: Judges and
judgement
(1) Choose for judgement
(and settlement of disputes) among people such persons
as you consider the best of your subjects; such as are
not exasperated by difficulties, are not made . when in
error, do not falter to affirm the truth when they have
perceived it, do not abase themselves through greed, are
not satisfied with a cursory understanding without going
deeply into a matter, are more cautions than others in
face of doubts, are most regardful of arguments, are the
least wearied by presentation of law suits, are most
patient at probing into matters, are the sharpest as to
the clarity of judgement, are not made proud by praise,
nor tilt (To one side) on account of instigation or
temptation. (Nahj al-balagheh, Kutub, No,53)
(2) Umar ibn Hanzalah
asked al-Imam al-Sadiq (A) about the duty of two Shiah
disputants when they have a dispute regarding debt or
inheritance. The Imam said, They should look for one of
your selves who narrates our ahadith, knows our halal
and haram and our ahkam. They must accept his judgement,
for I have appointed him a judge over you. So if he
gives a judgement according to our verdicts, and it is
not accepted, it is equal to contempt of Divine
judgement, and one who rejects us, rejects (Wasail
al-Shiah, Sifat al- qadi, Bab 12)
(3) Amir al-Mu'minin (A)
said, "One who faces the task of judgement should treat
both the parties equally in his presence and give them
equal attention and advice". (Wasail al-Shiah Adab
al-qadi, Bab 3)
Article 171: Judge's error
Asbagh ibn Nubatah
narrates from Amir al-Muminin (A) that he stated in a
decree: "If the judges make any error in cases involving
death penalty or amputation, the compensation lies with
the public the treasury of Muslims". (Wasail al-Shiah,
Adab al-qadi, Bab 10)
Article 174: Supervision of
executive bodies
You should check the
activities of your officials through spies who are
truthful and loyal, because your watching their actions
secretly would induce them to discharge the duties
entrusted to them and to act kindly with the people.
(Nahj-al-balaghah, Kutub, No. 53)
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