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Rouhani under fire over criticism of Shiite imams

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s apparent insistence that everyone can be criticized, including Shiite saints deemed infallible, riles the clergy.
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Iranian President Hassan Rouhani is facing a backlash over his latest comments about no one being above criticism — including Islamic rulers. Rouhani’s claims that even the Prophet Muhammad welcomed criticism by others has raised many objections among Iranian clerics who are now demanding that the president take back his words and not comment on religious matters in the future.

In a speech delivered Jan. 8, following the recent wave of protests in Iran, Rouhani voiced his disapproval over the filtering of social media networks in Iran and said everyone in the Islamic Republic could be criticized, without any exceptions: “All the officials in the country can be criticized. No one in the country is infallible.” Attempting to justify his statement, Rouhani referred to religious figures throughout Islam and added, “If one day the [hidden] 12th Imam [Mahdi] reappears, then we can criticize [him] too. … Even the Prophet of Islam [Muhammad] allowed [others] to criticize him. … People would ask him if his words were his own or revealed to him by God. If he said my own, they could criticize even his opinion. We don’t have anyone above the prophet in history.”

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