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Alive but weakened, Iran’s Khamenei faces new challenges

Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has re-emerged after the war with Israel but faces a struggle to maintain the authority he has wielded over the Islamic republic in over three-and-a-half decades of rule, analysts say.After days of silence, Khamenei appeared on Thursday in a video address to proclaim “victory” and prove he is still alive following the 12-day conflict with Israel which ended with a truce earlier this week.But Khamenei, appointed Iran’s number one and spiritual leader for life in 1989, spoke softly and hoarsely in the address, without the charismatic oratory for which he is known.Whereas his regular interventions before the war usually took place in public in front of an audience, this message was filmed against a plain backdrop of curtains and a picture of revolutionary founder Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.This may indicate he could still be in hiding after Israel refused to rule out seeking to assassinate him.On Thursday, Israel’s Defence Minister Israel Katz told media that the military would have killed Khamenei during the war if the opportunity had presented itself.”If he had been in our sights, we would have taken him out,” Katz told Israel’s public radio station Kan, adding that the military had “searched a lot”.But in the end, the conflict did not trigger the removal of the system that has ruled Iran since the 1979 revolution.Still, it enabled Israel to demonstrate military superiority and deep intelligence penetration of Iran by killing key members of Khamenei’s inner circle in targeted strikes.The war was also the latest in a series of setbacks over the last year for Khamenei.These include the downgrading of pro-Tehran militant groups Hamas and Hezbollah in conflicts with Israel and the fall of Iran’s ally in Syria Bashar al-Assad, against the background of economic crisis and energy shortages at home.”At this time, the regime does not seem to be on the verge of falling but it is certainly more vulnerable than it has been since the early years after the revolution,” said Thomas Juneau, professor at the University of Ottawa.- ‘Diminished figure’ -“The authority of the supreme leader has therefore certainly been undermined,” Juneau told AFP.”Even though his position remains secure, in that there is unlikely to be a direct challenge to his rule for now, he has lost credibility and bears direct responsibility for the Islamic republic’s major losses.”Khamenei is 86 and suffers the effects of a 1981 assassination attempt in Tehran which paralysed his right arm, a disability he has never made any attempt to hide.But discussion of succession has remained taboo in Iran, even if Western analysts have long eyed his son Mojtaba as a possible — but far from inevitable — contender.Arash Azizi, visiting fellow at Boston University, said Khamenei looked “frail and weak” in his televised message in “a far cry from the grand orator we know”.”It’s clear that he is a diminished figure, no longer authoritative and a shadow of his former self,” he said.”Power in Tehran is already passing to different institutions and factions and the battle for his succession will only intensify in the coming period.”Khamenei has come through crises before, using the state’s levers of repression, most recently during the 2022-2023 protests sparked by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, an Iranian Kurd detained for allegedly breaching Iran’s strict dress code for women.Rights activists say hundreds of people have been arrested in a new crackdown in the wake of the conflict.- ‘Sidelined’? -The New York Times and Iran International, a Persian-language television channel based outside Iran that is critical of the authorities, have said Khamenei spent the war in a bunker avoiding use of digital communication for fear of being tracked and assassinated.Iran International reported that Khamenei was not even involved in the discussions that led to the truce which were handled by the national security council and President Masoud Pezeshkian. There has been no confirmation of this claim.Jason Brodsky, policy director at the US-based United Against Nuclear Iran, said Khamenei appeared “frail and hoarse” and also “detached from reality” in insisting that Iran’s nuclear programme did not suffer significant damage.”Nevertheless, I remain sceptical of the theories that Khamenei has been sidelined,” he told AFP.”I have no doubt the war will prompt a debate within the Islamic Republic’s political elite as to how best to rebuild the system’s capabilities, but in the end, the buck has always stopped with Khamenei,” he said.

Dying breed: Tunisian dog lovers push to save age-old desert hound

Nemcha, Zina and Zouina, three North African Sloughi hounds, play on the beach in Tunisia where their ancestors have long roamed desert plains, seemingly unaware of the existential threat to their dwindling breed.The Sloughis, known for their speed and slender physique, have for many centuries accompanied nomadic societies across North Africa, and have been featured in art and lore dating back at least to the Roman era.But nowadays breeders and advocates say that unregulated crossbreeding, the decline of nomadic lifestyles and habitat shifts due to urbanisation mean that they might soon disappear.Olfa Abid, who was walking Nemcha, Zina and Zouina along the coast in northern Tunisia’s Ras Angela, said the age-old breed is “part of our heritage, our history”.”We must protect the Sloughi,” said Abid, a 49-year-old veterinarian, her arms wrapped around one of her dogs.Recent years have seen a spike in unregulated crossbreeding, mixing the local Sloughi with other hounds often brought in from abroad to boost its speed for dog races, according to Abid.National kennel club the Tunisian Canine Centre (CCT) has been working to raise awareness and safeguard the breed, including by creating a dedicated registry with a regulated breeding scheme.The organisation’s director Noureddine Ben Chehida said it also seeks to have the Tunisian Sloughi “recognised according to international standards” as a unique breed, under the guidelines of the International Canine Federation, the world’s main dog breed registry.Such recognition would give the local Sloughi population a place on the international stage and help preserve its lineage at home, Ben Chehida said.Also known as Arabian Greyhounds, today the CCT estimates that fewer than 200 pure-bred Sloughis remain in Tunisia.- ‘Noble’ hunters -With their short coats in sandy hues or grey and arched backs, the hounds’ swift gait has earned them a precious spot in Tunisian folklore even as the desert life they once supported gradually vanishes.Historians debate how they first made it to this part of North Africa, but many attribute their arrival to nomadic tribes like the Mrazigs who live in the south of modern-day Tunisia.For centuries, or possibly even millennia, the Sloughis have been vital companions to desert nomads, helping them hunt and guard livestock.”Running like a Sloughi” is still a common saying in Tunisia.”It’s a noble dog that was the pride of its nomadic owners,” said Abid. “It’s a primitive hunter with a purpose when food was scarce.”She said the Sloughi has also had a more privileged standing compared to most dogs that are generally considered impure in Islamic cultures.Unlike other breeds, Sloughis have traditionally been allowed indoors and would even eat beside their owners, said Abid.- Ancestral heritage -In the southern town of Douz, on the edge of the Sahara desert, dog breeder Nabil Marzougui said the “proliferation of hybrid breeds” is putting the Sloughis’ future at risk.”We inherited this dog from our forefathers,” said Marzougui, calling for authorities to intervene to save the Sloughis as well as the ancestral tradition that they embody.The hounds require ample daily exercise, especially where hunting is no longer available or needed.This is why Abid said she had left the city to settle in the quiet coastal village of Ras Angela, on Africa’s northernmost tip, where long stretches of sand serve as an ideal terrain for her three dogs to run around and roam free.Their seaside adventures, which Abid shares on social media, are now followed by thousands of people online.Hatem Bessrour, a 30-year-old agricultural engineer and the proud owner of a Sloughi named Cacahuete, called on fellow dog owners to register their pure-bred hounds with the national canine centre to support its breeding programme.The breed is part Tunisia’s heritage, he said. “We must care for it just like we care for antiquities and archaeological sites.”