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Mohammad-Javad Bahonar

 
Wikipedia: Mohammad-Javad Bahonar
Mohammad-Javad Bahonar
محمد جواد باهنر


In office
15 August 1981 – 30 August 1981
President Mohammad Ali Rajai
Leader Ruhollah Khomeini
Preceded by Mohammad Ali Rajai
Succeeded by Mohammad Reza Mahdavi Kani

In office
10 August 1980 – 10 August 1981
President Abolhassan Banisadr
Leader Ruhollah Khomeini
Preceded by Ali Akbar Parvaresh
Succeeded by Ali Shokoohi

Born 1933
Kerman, Iran
Died August 30, 1981
Tehran, Iran
Political party Islamic Republic Party
Religion Usuli Islam

Hojatoleslam Mohammad Javad Bahonar (محمدجواد باهنر in Persian) (1933 - August 30, 1981) was the second prime minister of Iran following the 1979 revolution, and the secretary-general of the Islamic Republic Party.

Bahonar was born in Kerman, Iran. He was a cleric who was imprisoned for anti-government activities during the 1960s. However, he had not been active in politics for a long time before the Revolution, but was co-authoring textbooks in Islamic studies. It was only after the revolution that he became a founding member of the Islamic Republic party and an original member of the Council of Revolution of Iran. He was chosen as the Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance under Mohammad Ali Rajai's prime ministry in March 1981, and continued efforts to purge Iranian universities of secular influences, in what became known as the Islamic Cultural Revolution. When Rajai became President on August 4, 1981, he chose Bahonar as his prime minister.

After Mohammad Beheshti was assassinated on June 28, 1981, Bahonar became the secretary-general of the Islamic Republic party, but he didn't last long in that position, nor in the position of Prime Minister, as he was assassinated after less than two months in these offices, along with Rajai and other party leaders, when a bomb exploded at his office in Tehran. The assassin was identified as Massoud Kashmiri, an operative of The People's Mujahedin of Iran (also known as the MKO, MEK and PMOI), who had infiltrated the Prime Minister's office in the guise of a state security official.


Preceded by
Ali Shokoohi
Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance
1980-1981
Succeeded by
Ali Akbar Parvaresh
Preceded by
Mohammad Ali Rajai
Prime Minister of Iran
1981
Succeeded by
Mohammad Reza Mahdavi Kani

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