BBC:

A relatively moderate member of the Iranian parliament, Masoud Pezeshkian has been declared the next president of Iran after beating his hardline conservative rival by a decisive margin in Friday’s run-off presidential elections.

The 69-year-old will replace Ebrahim Raisi, who died in a helicopter crash last month.

Mr Pezeshkian’s mostly young supporters took to the streets of the capital, Tehran, and other cities to celebrate - even before the final results were declared, singing, dancing and waving his campaign's signature green flags.

He has given some of the nation's younger generation hope at a time when many were despondent about their future. Some were even planning to leave the country to seek a better life elsewhere.

Representing the city of Tabriz in the Iranian parliament since 2008, he has previously served as the country's heath minister.

In the 1990s, he lost his wife and one of his children in a car accident. He never remarried and raised his other three children - two sons and a daughter - alone.

His win has upset the plans of the Islamic hardliners, who hoped to install another conservative to replace Raisi and - alongside supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei - control all of Iran's levers of power.

At a polling station in Tehran, 48-year-old Fatemeh told the AFP news agency she had voted for the moderate as his "priorities include women and young people's rights".

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