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Regional News
Powerful Iranian cleric says country in crisis
Published Date: July 19, 2009 

TEHRAN: In a sign of endurance for Iran's protest movement, demonstrators 
clashed with police Friday as one of the nation's most powerful clerics 
challenged the supreme leader during Muslim prayers, saying the country was in 
crisis in the wake of a disputed election. The turnout of tens of thousands of 
worshippers for former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani's sermon at Tehran 
University and the battles with police outside represented the biggest 
opposition show of strength in weeks.

Protesters faced fierce government suppression and hundreds were arrested 
following the June 12 presidential election. Outside the university, protests 
grew from several hundred people before the sermon to thousands afterward as 
worshippers joined in, chanting "death to the dictator," a reference to 
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Protesters were confronted by riot police and a menacing line of pro-government 
Basiji militiamen on motorcycles, who charged with batons. Plainclothes Basijis 
fired volleys of tear gas, and young protesters with green bandanas over their 
faces kicked the canisters across the pavement. Some set a bonfire in the 
street and waved their hands in victory signs. Dozens were arrested and taken 
away in trucks, witnesses said.

Protests, which flared following the election, had been stifled in recent 
weeks. The sometimes tearful sermon by Rafsanjani could be a significant boost 
to the movement's staying power. It was an open challenge to Supreme Leader 
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, aired live on nationwide radio from one of the 
country's most potent political stages.

By openly showing the divisions in the leadership, it punched a hole in efforts 
by Khamenei and hard-line clerics to end the controversy over Ahmadinejad's 
re-election. Worshippers chanted "azadi, azadi," Persian for "freedom," during 
Rafsanjani's sermon, his first since the election. Opposition leader Mir 
Hossein Mousavi, who claims to have won the election, sat among the 
worshippers, attending the country's main prayer service for the first time 
since the turmoil began.

Many of those gathered wore headbands or wristbands in his campaign color 
green, or had green prayer rugs, crowding the former soccer field where prayers 
are held and spilling into nearby streets. Rafsanjani denounced the government 
crackdown on protests and called for the release of the hundreds detained. He 
reprimanded the clerical leadership for not listening to people's complaints 
over the election, which was declared a victory for Ahmadinejad despite 
opposition accusations of fraud.

There is a large portion of the wise people who say they have doubts (about the 
election). We need to take action to remove this doubt," he said. "The trust 
that brought the people to vote in such large numbers is not there anymore. We 
need to return this trust." Rafsanjani avoided directly mentioning Khamenei or 
outright calling the vote fraudulent. He couched his sermon in calls for unity 
in support of Iran's Islamic Republic, but it was clear he blamed the 
leadership for the loss of unity.

Tears welled in the cleric's eyes as he spoke of how Islam's Prophet Muhammad 
"respected the rights" of his people. He said the founder of Iran's Islamic 
Republic, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, "would always say that if the system is 
not backed by the people, nothing would stand." For Iranians listening across 
the country, the weekly Friday sermon in Tehran is the voice of the leadership 
and a symbol of its backing by God.

After hundreds of thousands joined protests against the election results in the 
days following the vote, the supreme leader used the podium to declare 
Ahmadinejad's victory valid and order a stop to unrest. The crackdown was 
launched soon after. In the weeks that followed, hard-line clerics have used 
the sermon to depict the protesters as tools of foreign enemies and tell 
worshippers to follow Khamenei.

Rafsanjani's sermon signaled the broader public that the dispute was internal 
and even Iran's ruling clerics are split. He directly referred to the 
divisions, saying the revered topmost theologians of Shia Islam, who have 
millions of followers, were not happy with the government. Rafsanjani heads two 
powerful clerical bodies that oversee the government and parliament, the 
Expediency Council and the Experts Council. He is a bitter rival of Ahmadinejad 
and is considered Mousavi's top supporter within Iran's
clerical leadership.

A mercurial and savvy politician, Rafsanjani positioned himself as a leader 
emerging to resolve the unrest, saying he hoped his words would be a start to 
"help us pass safely through a problem that can unfortunately be called a 
crisis." He specifically criticized his top rivals within the clerical 
leadership _ the Guardians Council, a body dominated by hard-liners. The 
council oversaw the election, then held a partial recount that upheld 
Ahmadinejad's win but was dismissed by the opposition.

Rafsanjani said the Guardians Council missed an "opportunity to unite the 
people and regain their trust." During the service, worshippers traded 
competing chants with some hard-liners in the congregation. When the 
hard-liners chanted "death to America," Mousavi supporters countered with 
"death to Russia" and "death to China," a reference to Ahmadinejad's alliance 
with both countries.

The Iranian government has accused the US and other Western countries of 
inciting the massive street protests and interfering with the election. On 
Thursday, Ahmadinejad demanded an apology from the US as a step toward dialogue 
between the two countries.

They tried to interfere in our elections. They talked nonsense. They were rude. 
They fomented aggression against people's wealth and property," Ahmadinejad 
told a crowd of thousands in the northwestern city of Mashhad. The US has 
denied the government's allegations. More than 500 remain in prison following 
the government's crackdown and at least 20 were killed. In the past three 
weeks, the opposition held only one other significant protest before Friday's.

The scene outside the university on Friday was tumultuous. Before the sermon, 
police fired tear gas at hundreds of Mousavi backers trying to enter. When 
Mahdi Karroubi, another pro-reform candidate in the June election, headed for 
the prayers, plainclothes Basijis attacked him, shouting "death to the opponent 
of Velayat-e-Faqih," or supreme leader, witnesses said.

Also arrested was a prominent women's rights activist, Shadi Sadr, who was 
beaten by militiamen, pushed into a car and driven away to an unknown location, 
Mousavi's Web site said. Protests died down by nightfall. After sunset, 
Iranians could be heard shouting from rooftops, "God is great" and "death to 
the dictator" a show of opposition support that has been held every night since 
the election, but appeared louder and more widespread Friday night. - AP 

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