I/II.
http://www.theage.com.au/world/crackdown-crunches-iran-reformers-20090614-c7bx.html

Crackdown crunches Iran reformers

Jason Koutsoukis and Anne Davies
June 15, 2009

A SEVERE crackdown on Iran's emerging reform movement began on the weekend
after incumbent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad scored a resounding win in Friday's
presidential elections.

At least 10 leaders of two reformist groups who had backed opposition
candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi were under arrest last night as police used
tear gas and clubs to quell mass street protests.

A total of 170 people were arrested over the big post-election protests and
street riots in Tehran.

Speaking on national television, Mr Ahmadinejad praised the Iranian people
for choosing to look towards the future.

"This is a great victory at a time and condition when the whole material,
political and propaganda facilities outside of Iran and sometime -- inside
Iran, were mobilised against our people," he said.

The mood in the capital, Tehran, was tense as large groups of riot police
patrolled the streets, moving along drivers who had been honking their horns
in apparent protest.

Amid charges of electoral fraud and vote rigging, official results showed Mr
Ahmadinejad won 63 per cent of the nearly 40 million votes cast, with
overwhelming backing from Iran's vast rural constituencies, compared to 34
per cent won by Mr Mousavi.

The election result is certain to heighten tensions across the region and
could hamper US President Barack Obama's attempts to build dialogue with
Iran.

In Canberra, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd warned of difficulties. "The world
community has a real challenge on its hands with Mr Ahmadinejad's
re-election," he said.

The Obama Administration noted the allegations of electoral fraud, and
stopped short of congratulating Mr Ahmadinejad, but also acknowledged the
very vigorous campaign.

"Like the rest of the world, we were impressed by the vigorous debate and
enthusiasm that this election generated, particularly among young Iranians,"
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said. "We continue to monitor the entire
situation closely, including reports of irregularities."

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who was travelling in Canada, said:
"We obviously hope that the outcome reflects the genuine will and desire of
the Iranian people."

Other US commentators were more blunt. Karim Sadjadpour, an Iran expert at
the Carnegie Endowment for Peace, said it was a "stolen election".

Steve Clemons, a director at the New American Foundation, said: "Iran will
be tied in knots now — for a long time. What worries me about this is the
tendency of Iran's leadership to generate external crises and international
focal points to try and distract a frustrated citizenry and unify the
nation."

But others saw the possibility of working with Iran once the dust settles.

"It would be great if there were real democracy in Iran and the United
States did not have to deal with the execrable incumbent President," Gregory
Gause, an associate professor of political science at the University of
Vermont wrote on Foreign Policy magazine's website.

"But American interests here are not about Iranian domestic politics. They
are about Iran's role in Iraq, Afghanistan, the Gulf, the Arab-Israeli
arena, and the nuclear program."

Mr Ahmadinejad's resounding win was greeted with relief in Israel, where it
was anticipated that a win by Mr Mousavi could have weakened international
pressure on Iran.

Israeli Vice-Premier Silvan Shalom said the results were a slap in the face
of those who believed that Iran was capable of real dialogue with the West.

"The United States and the free world must re-evaluate their policy on
Tehran's nuclear ambitions," Mr Shalom said.

According to commentator Yoav Limor, the Israeli reaction to Mr
Ahmadinejad's re-election was predictable: "Warnings outwardly, and smiles
inwardly."

"For years, Israel thought that Ahmadinejad was a disaster, but recently the
approach has changed and decision makers have adopted an approach that
considers him a 'gift'," Limor said. "Why? Because a moderate president
would speak softly, and the world would be tempted to believe him and would
refrain from confrontation, and behind the scenes Iran would continue to
gallop, unhampered by sanctions, towards nuclear capability."

In Iran, Rajab Ali Mazroei of the opposition Islamic Iran Participation
Front said that at least 10 members of the front and the Islamic Revolution
Mujahideen Organisation had been arrested last night.

Several of those arrested held senior government positions under reformist
former president Mohammad Khatami, who served from 1997 to 2005.

Amid rumours that he himself had been arrested, Mr Mousavi, a former prime
minister, vowed not to "surrender in the face of numerous irregularities".
In a statement on his website he called for calm.

With AFP

II.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090613/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iran_election

Election battles turn into street fights in Iran

By ANNA JOHNSON and BRIAN MURPHY, Associated Press Writers
Sat Jun 13, 6:34 pm ET

TEHRAN, Iran – Opponents of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad clashed with police in the
heart of Iran's capital Saturday, pelting them with rocks and setting fires
in the worst unrest in Tehran in a decade. They accused the hard-line
president of using fraud to steal election victory from his reformist rival.
The brazen and angry confrontations — including stunning scenes of masked
rioters tangling with black-clad police — pushed the self-styled reformist
movement closer to a possible moment of truth: Whether to continue defying
Iran's powerful security forces or, as they often have before, retreat into
quiet dismay and frustration over losing more ground to the Islamic
establishment.
But for at least one day, the tone and tactics were more combative than at
any time since authorities put down student-led protests in 1999. Young men
hurled stones and bottles at anti-riot units and mocked Ahmadinejad as an
illegitimate leader. The reformists' new hero, Mir Hossein Mousavi, declared
himself the true winner of Friday's presidential race and urged backers to
resist a government based on "lies and dictatorship."
Authorities, too, pushed back with ominous measures apparently seeking to
undercut liberal voices: jamming text messages, blocking pro-Mousavi Web
sites and Facebook and cutting off mobile phones in Tehran.
The extent of possible casualties and detentions was not immediately clear.
Police stormed the headquarters of Iran's largest reformist party, the
Islamic Iran Participation Front, and arrested several top reformist
leaders, said political activists close to the party.The activists spoke on
condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation.
Mousavi did not appear in public, but warned in a Web message: "People won't
respect those who take power through fraud."
Many backers took this call to the streets. Thousands of protesters — mostly
young men — roamed through Tehran looking for a fight with police and
setting trash bins and tires ablaze. Pillars of black smoke rose among the
mustard-colored apartment blocks and office buildings in central Tehran. In
one side road, an empty bus was engulfed in flames.
Police fought back with clubs, including mobile squads on motorcycles
swinging truncheons.
The scuffles began when protesters gathered hours outside the Interior
Ministry around the time officials announced the final election results
showing a nearly 2-to-1 landslide for Ahmadinejad. Demonstrators chanted
"the government lied" and waved the ribbons of Mousavi's "green" movement —
the signature color of his youth-driven campaign.
"I won't surrender to this manipulation," said a statement on Mousavi's Web
site. "The outcome of what we've seen from the performance of officials ...
is nothing but shaking the pillars of the Islamic Republic of Iran's sacred
system and governance of lies and dictatorship."
The door for possible compromise was closed by Iran's supreme leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. He could have used his near-limitless powers to
intervene in the election dispute. But, in a message on state TV, he urged
the nation to unite behind Ahmadinejad, calling the result a "divine
assessment."
There are no independent election monitors in Iran. Mousavi's claims,
however, point to some noticeable breaks with past election counting.
The tallies from previous elections — time-consuming paper ballots — began
to trickle in hours after polls closed. This time, huge chunks of results —
millions at a time — poured in almost immediately from a huge turnout of
about 85 percent of Iran's 46.2 million voters. The final outcome: 62.6
percent of the vote to Ahmadinejad and 33.75 for Mousavi, a former prime
minister from the 1980s.
The U.S. refused to accept Ahmadinejad's claim of a landslide re-election
victory said it was looking into allegations of election fraud.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said she hoped the outcome
reflects the "genuine will and desire" of Iranian voters. At a joint
appearance with Clinton, Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon
said his country was "deeply concerned" by reports of irregularities in the
election.
Past Iranian elections were considered generally fair. In 2005, when
Ahmadinejad was first elected, the losing candidates claimed irregularities
at the polls, but the charges were never investigated.
"The majority of Iranians are certain that the fraud is widespread," said
Tehran-based analyst Saeed Leilaz. "It's like taking 10 million votes away
from Mousavi and giving them to Ahmadinejad."
Whether this is enough to spawn a sustained opposition movement remains an
open question.
Much depends on how much they are willing to risk. The heartland of Iran's
liberal ranks is the educated and relatively affluent districts of north
Tehran. It's also the showcase for the gains in social freedoms that began
with the election of President Mohammad Khatami in 1997: makeup, Internet
cafes, head scarves that barely cover hair and satellite dishes that are
technically illegal but common.
The ruling clerics tolerate all that to a point — part of a tacit
arrangement that the liberties stay as long as reformists remain politically
meek. A real protest movement could threaten their coveted Western-looking
lifestyle and risk a brutal response from groups vowing to defend the
Islamic system.
The political chief of the powerful Revolutionary Guard has warned it would
crush any "revolution" against the Islamic regime by Mousavi's "green
movement" — drawing parallels to the "velvet revolution" of 1989 in
then-Czechoslovakia.
Ahmadinejad accused the foreign media of producing coverage that harmed the
Iranian people, saying "a large number of foreign media ... organized a
full-fledged fight against our people."
Authorities also called foreign journalists with visas to cover the
elections, including members of The Associated Press, and told them they
should prepare to leave the country. Italian state TV RAI said one of its
crews was caught in the clashes in front Mousavi's headquarters. Their
Iranian interpreter was beaten with clubs by riot police and officers
confiscated the cameraman's tapes, the station said.
"The massive demonstrations of police and army presence on the streets was
designed to show that they were quite ready to kill protesters if they had
to in order to impose order," said Patrick Clawson, deputy director at the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy. "On the whole, these guys in
north Tehran who are terribly upset about what is happening are not ready to
die."
Hadi Ghaemi, spokesman for the International Campaign for Human Rights in
Iran, denounced the outcome as "a Tehran Tiananmen" — a reference to China's
brutal 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy activists — and urged the
international community not to recognize the result.
There were also protests by Mousavi supporters in the southern city of Ahvaz
in the oil-rich province of Khuzestan who shouted, "Mousavi, take our votes
back!" witnesses said.
Mousavi called on his backers to avoid violence, but he is still talking
tough about pressing his claims of election fraud. He charges the polls
closed early but has not fully outlined all of his fraud allegations.
Unlike his ally Khatami, Mousavi is a hardened political veteran who led the
country during the grim years of the 1980-88 war with Iraq. He also could
join forces with the powerful political patriarch Heshemi Rafsanjani, who
strongly opposed Ahmadinejad's re-election during the intense monthlong
campaign.
Amjad Atallah, a Washington-based regional analyst, called it "one of the
most existential moments" in Iran since 1979 Islamic Revolution.
"You can't overstate how important what is happening now is for Iran," he
said.
In Tehran, several Ahmadinejad supporters cruised the streets at dawn waving
Iranian flags out of car windows and shouting "Mousavi is dead!"
They were quickly overwhelmed by the Mousavi backers.
The protesters — some hiding their faces with masks — still wandered the
streets after nightfall as some fires still burned. The pungent smell of
burning rubber and smoldering trash lingered in some parts of the city.
Hundreds of anti-riot police blocked the streets leading to Tehran
University's dormitory, home to thousands of students and the site of the
1999 student riots that marked the biggest disturbances in post-revolution
Iran. University exams nationwide were postponed until next month.
Oddly, normal life was interspersed with the anger. People continued
shopping and stores remained open.
With the Internet and mobile texting down, some Iranians turned to Twitter
to voice their views.
"Very disappointed with Iran elections," said one entry."Apparently still a
backward regressive nation."
Another: "Elections in Iran: stayed tuned as it gets interesting (& maybe
scary)."
Ahmadinejad addressed a crowd in Tehran, but did not mention the unrest,
saying only "a new era has begun in the history of the Iranian nation."
But there were no hints of any new policy shifts on key international issues
such as Iran's standoff over its nuclear program and the offer by President
Barack Obama to open dialogue after a nearly 30-year diplomatic
estrangement. All high-level decisions are controlled by the ruling
theocracy.
____
Brian Murphy reported from Cairo.

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