Dariush Rahiminia, Bachelor in Investigation and Security Sciences, expert in Investigative Psychology, specializing in Internazional development and cooperation.
His studies are concentrated on intercultural sociology and human rights defense. Born in Italy from Iranian parents, he holds both Iranian and Italian citizenships. He loves studying International Relationships due to his Persian origins and his lots of travels around the world.
Now he is a Criminological Advisor and a Technical counselor in various legal practices and for a recovery center for criminals.
In his first press conference since the election last June, the Iranian president Hassan Rohani said that there would be problems to conduct direct negotiations with the U.S. on the Iranian nuclear issue, as long as national interests are protected and to be put aside language of pressures and threats.
The U.S., according to Rohani, should not follow any hidden agenda and work towards the mutual respect between the two nations. Rohani also criticized the laws passed by the House of Representatives U.S. and the calls by U.S. senators to a tightening of sanctions against Iran.
Today, 4 August 2013, after having received yesterday the blessing of the Supreme Leader Khamenei, the new Iranian president Hassan Rohani has sworn in front of the Majles during a ceremony which was attended for the first time sent from different countries: the former EU chief diplomat Javier Solana, the presidents of Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Pakistan, and the officer of North Korea Kim Yong Nam.
Hassan Rohani happens to Mahmud Ahmadinejad, who during his two terms has been noted for the closure to the West over its nuclear program and the increased tension with Israel.
It seems that the only words of the newly elected Iranian President Hassan Rohani were enough to set in motion international opinion and stimulate the various powers to assess future opening to Iran. Before establishing officially, the president Rohani said that his future government is committed to a policy of constructive understanding with the world, all while defending the rights of the Iranian people.
Today's elections in Iran have elected Hassan Rohani as the new Chief Executive of the Islamic Republic, but who is the new president?
Hassan Rohani was born in Sorkheh in the November 12, 1948. He graduated in law at the University of Tehran, he continued his studies in law getting a doctorate at Glasgow Caledonian University in Scotland. Currently a member of the Expediency Discernment Council and the Assembly of Experts, covering the role of director of the Center of the Expediency Council for Strategic Research. Politically deployed among the ranks of the moderate and centrist. Known as "the sheikh diplomat," was secretary of the Supreme National Security Council from 1989 to 2005 and in this capacity, the chief diplomat for negotiations on Iran's nuclear development.