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Updates From Iran streets via Twitter, Video: Helicopters spraying a type of ACID, similar to what Mojahedeen used in '78-'82."

Marg bar Khamenei rings out all over Tehran and rest of Iran. Something big is happening...  Basij base at navab st. was burned by protesters
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Helicopters did not spray boiling water. It was a type of ACID, similar to what Mojahedeen used in '78-'82.

 As of late afternoon Basij are everywhere..."

(“Currently Basij serve as an auxiliary force engaged in activities such as law enforcement, emergency management, the providing of social service, organizing of public religious ceremonies, and more controversially morals policing and the suppression of dissident gatherings. They have a local organization in almost every city in Iran.”)
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More twitter;

http://iran.twazzup.com/

Marg bar Khamenei rings out all over Tehran and rest of Iran. Something big is happening

Basij base at navab st. was burned by protesters
and latest:
Canadians, call your foreign office. It's confirmed Canadian Embassy rejects injured protesters
11:40
Hospital close to the scene in Tehran: 30-40 dead thus far as of 11pm and 200 injured. Police taking names of incoming injured
11:50
Chants and gunshots can be heard on the roofs
11:52
Azadi St., Sanati Sharif University indicate that more that 10 helicopters landed inside the university
11:53
unloaded massive amounts of guns for more than 500 basijies whom had been sent there several hours earlier to confront the demonstrators
11:55
""According to same private listserv source, "People from all around Tehran are gathering to march into the city later at night""
12:00
Security Forces attacked Khomeini Hospital to arrest injured protesters, it is said at least 30 injured are there...
12:01
Basij base burned by protesters at Navab St. (South Tehran) 12:02
another person dead in Azarabayjan ST in Tehran
12:05 young protester killed with bullet through the head on Navab street
12:06
Conf'd Iran Fatemiyeh Hospital Tehran: 30-40 dead as of 11pm; 200 injured. Police taking names of incoming injured
Plus some new pics posted at Revolutionary Road
Also now:
Twitter:
TehranBureau Omid007: Haft Hooz SQ. is on fire, Protesters are so angry and try to push back Bassij with Coctel Molotov...
 
And:

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ggiraudy: RT @cnnbrk: vid shows Tehran protester apparently shot, man runs thru crowd w/ blood on hands, chant of ‘Death 2 the dictator’ #iranelection
less than 10 seconds ago from UberTwitter · Reply · View Tweet

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thegre8_1: RT @wikiworf RT @michellemalkin: RT @allahpundit: RT @TehranBureau: Hospital close 2 the scene Tehran: 30-40 dead as of 11pm, 200 injured.
less than 10 seconds ago from web · Reply · View Tweet

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Amalari: RT @newmediajim: the only people more vile than the basij are the filth on Twitter adding words like “Tehran” to their “make $$ on the ...
less than 10 seconds ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet

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ijkrama: #IranElection Tehran Mousavi Amadinejad Protests Iran Revolution - Breaking News - Suicide Bomber Attacks ... - http://bit.ly/qmZhc (expand)
less than 20 seconds ago from Twitterizer · Reply · View Tweet

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pears3000: Twitition: Google Earth to update satellite images of Tehran #Iranelection http://twitition.com/csfeo @patrickaltoft
less than 20 seconds ago from Twitition · Reply · View Tweet

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nahrain: For announcements regarding which embassies are accepting the injured in Tehran, please see/follow @negaratduke.
less than 20 seconds ago from web · Reply · View Tweet

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Zachattack25: RT Video from rooftops in Tehran of #IranElection Protests http://tinyurl.com/lemgd4 (expand) AMAZING VIDEO!
less than 20 seconds ago from web · Reply · View Tweet

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nsomeh: read news from tehran
less than 20 seconds ago from web · Reply · View Tweet

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shadzbee: NORWAY EMBASSY phone # Tel: 0098 21 2229 1333 #IranElection #Tehran #Mousavi #GR88 #iranelections #iranelection
less than 20 seconds ago from web · Reply · View Tweet

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ghostykips: #IranElection Tweets continue to report Canadian embassy not accepting wounded in Tehran, reports Australian one IS however
less than 20 seconds ago from Twitscoop · Reply · View Tweet

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ElaineGiamona: RT @TehranBureau: Fatemiyeh Hospital Tehran: 30-40 dead as of 11pm; 200 injured. Police taking names of incoming injured. #iranelection
less than 20 seconds ago from web · Reply · View Tweet

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christmasfairie: @oxfordgirl Mousavi will die for Iran, but Ahmadinejad does not have the courage to show his face for his country. #iranelection #Tehran RT
less than 20 seconds ago from web · Reply · View Tweet · Thread Show ConversationHide Conversation

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luv4tn: RT @fgdorais: RT from Iran: Tehran will not Sleep tonight!
less than 20 seconds ago from TweetDeck · Reply · View Tweet

http://search.twitter.com/search?q=tehran

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Follow twitter at http://iran.twazzup.com/    This is the new instant media to get around state conrolled media.
 

More twitter;

http://iran.twazzup.com/

helicopters unloaded massive amount of guns for more than 500 basijies who had been sent there several hrs earlier.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

More twitter;

http://iran.twazzup.com/

just in from iran: they throw grenande in SATTAKHRAN avenue killed a girl and wounded some people

Retwitters: according to same private listserv source, “People from all around Tehran are gathering to march into the city later at night.”

eyewitness: young protester killed with bullet through the head on Navab street

Embassies Accepting Injured People in Tehran
http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=108089191184151933961.00046ccb4946d8e0073dd&ll=35.749299,51.432838&spn=0.156592,0.251312&z=12

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Tweets:   3.14 pm. according to same private listserv source, "People from all around Tehran are gathering to march into the city later at night."

unloaded massive amounts of guns for more than 500 basijies whom had been sent there several hours earlier to confront the demonstrators.

Reports from Tehran, Azadi St., Sanati Sharif University indicate that more that 10 helicopters landed inside the university,

Fatemiyeh Hospital Tehran: 30-40 dead as of 11pm; 200 injured. Police taking names of incoming injured.

Reports: Security Forces attacked to Khomini Hospital to arrest Injurd protesters, It is said at least 30 injurd are there...

Reports: At Least 10 Protesters Shoted By Bassij, Bassij Opend Gunfire to People at Haft Hooz SQ.

2.58 pm. good source: Hospital close to the scene in Tehran: 30-40 dead thus far as of 11pm and 200 injured. Police taking names of incoming injured.

Voice from Iran: Shame on a country in which foreign embassies are safer than hospitals Sad

Gunfire Is Hearing From Near Resalat SQ. (East Teharan)

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2.47 pm. New footage of fighting in the streets. And another protester is shot.

2.31 pm. Canadians, call your foreign office. It’s confirmed Canadian Embassy rejects injured protesters

Australian Embassy reportedly accepting injured

My Friend Wounded At Haft Hooz SQ, No Clinic Is Open! http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2009/06/liveblogging-day-8.html

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Twitter       http://iran.twazzup.com/     RT Iran "Helicopters spraying water with agent in it onto crowds. Skin irritant, will make it feel as though water is scalding."
 
More twitter;

http://iran.twazzup.com/

” The iranian government has ordered to all ambulatory services to take injured to the Revolutionary Guard hospitals...”

Reports from Tehran, Azadi St., Sanati Sharif University indicate that more that 10 helicopters landed inside the university,

RT: Mobile Network is Cut Off Almost All Over the City!

Emails are getting through! Iranians, check your email folders! Replies are coming out!

Hospital close to the scene in Tehran: 30-40 dead as of 11pm + 200 injured. Police taking names of injured
________________________________________________________________________________________________________
 
BBC reporting "a woman was shot in the head by police."
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
This lead came from blogger in Tehran, Iran on June 21, 2009
 

www.information.is-the-coolest.com

Your #1 Source Of Information On The Internet!


Following the 2009 Iranian presidential election, protests against alleged electoral fraud and in support of opposition candidate Mir-Hossein Mousavi are as of 21 June 2009 (2009 -06-21) underway in Tehran and other major cities in Iran and around the world.[3] In response, other groups have rallied in Tehran to support the victory of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.[4] The ongoing protests have been given several titles including the Green Revolution due to presidential candidate Mousavi's campaign color, the Freedom Square Revolution due to the protests' original location in Tehran, and the Persian Awakening has also been used by some Iranian commentators and protesters.

Some analysts called the controversial election results a coup[5][6][7] (or "?????? ?? ?????" in Persian—the Anno Persarum 1388 Khordad 22nd Coup d'etat). All three opposition candidates have claimed that the votes were manipulated and the election was rigged, and candidates Mohsen Rezaee and Mousavi have lodged official complaints. Mousavi announced that he "won't surrender to this manipulation" before lodging an official appeal against the result to the Guardian Council on 14 June.[4]

The Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei declared the unprecedented voter turnout and coinciding religious holidays as a "divine assessment", and urged the nation to unite,[8] and later ordered an investigation into the claims of vote fraud.[9][10] Mousavi is not optimistic about his appeal, saying that many of the group's members "during the election were not impartial".[11] Ahmadinejad called the election "completely free" and the outcome "a great victory" for Iran, dismissing the protests as little more than "passions after a soccer match".[12]

Police and a paramilitary group called the Basij have violently suppressed the protests, firing into crowds and using batons, pepper spray, and other weapons. There have been twenty confirmed deaths during the protests.[13] Iranian authorities have closed universities in Tehran, blocked web sites, cell phone transmissions and text messaging,[14] and banned rallies.[9]

Contents

Background

The election of the president of Iran in 2009 was preceded by an independent survey by the US-based Terror Free Tomorrow organization.[15] Their opinion poll, conducted from May 11–20, 2009 (thus only during the first week of the 30 days election campaigns) predicted the high participation and showed similar ratios for the candidates to the later official result, with over a quarter yet undecided.[16] The many Iranian surveys show a wide range of differing results. As an opinion in the New York Times points out, this is due to the high fluctuation among voters during the campaign season.[17]

The election for presidency took place on June 12, 2009. Unlike the election in 2005, there was a high participation. The official results were rejected by all three opposition candidates, who claimed that the votes were manipulated and the election was rigged. The last presidential election had already been controversial, but this time it escalated. Candidates Mohsen Rezaee and Mousavi have lodged official complaints. Mousavi announced that he "won't surrender to this manipulation" before lodging an official appeal against the result to the Guardian Council on 14 June.[4]

The Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei declared the unprecedented voter turnout and coinciding religious holidays as a "divine assessment", and urged the nation to unite,[8] and later ordered an investigation into the claims of vote fraud.[10] Referring to Mousavi's appeal letter about the irregularities, Khamenei said that "the Guardian Council has been emphasized to carry out investigation into this letter carefully," and probe allegations of electoral fraud.[10] Mousavi is not optimistic about his appeal, saying that many of the group's members "during the election were not impartial".[11]

Ahmadinejad called the election "completely free" and the outcome "a great victory" for Iran, dismissing the protests as little more than "passions after a soccer match".[12]

According to a scientific analysis by Professor Walter R. Mebane, Jr., from Department of Statistics of University of Michigan, considering data from the first stage of the 2005 presidential election produces results that "give moderately strong support for a diagnosis that the 2009 election was affected by significant fraud."[18]

Timeline

June 13

Clashes broke out between police and groups protesting the election results from early Saturday morning onward. The protests were initially mostly peaceful but became increasingly violent. Angry crowds in Tehran broke into shops, tore down signs and smashed windows.[3] The worst civil unrest in Iran for over a decade took place as protesters set fire to tires outside the Interior Ministry building and others formed a human chain of around 300 people to close off a major Tehran street.

Anonymous sources said that the police stormed the headquarters of the Islamic Iran Participation Front and arrested a number of people.[8][19] Two hundred people protested outside Iran's embassy in London on June 13.[20] Ynet has stated that "tens of thousands" protested on June 13.[21] Demonstrators chanted phrases such as "Down with the dictator", "Death to the dictator", and "Give us our votes back".[21][22] Mousavi has urged for calm and asked that his supporters refrain from acts of violence.[22] Protests led by Iranian-Americans were also held outside the Iranian representative office in New York City.[23]

On June 13, modern Middle Eastern and South Asian historian Juan Cole commented that "public demonstrations against the result don't appear to be that big... reformers have always backed down in Iran when challenged by hardliners, in part because no one wants to relive the horrible Great Terror of the 1980s after the revolution, when faction-fighting produced blood in the streets."[24] Independent journalist Michael Totten stated that day that "Tehran almost looks like a war zone already", and he compared Ahmadinejad to Baghdad Bob.[25]

June 14

By June 14 the protests had grown considerably and had become more violent. Burning buses and trash cans and parked cars blocked streets and highways in Tehran and routes leading into the city. Protesters attacked shops, government offices, police stations, police vehicles, gas stations and banks.[26] Large protests, which escalated into riots, had also broken out at Tehran University, Amirkabir University, and Shahid Beheshti University, where students started burning and destroying various buildings and items around the campuses. Valiasr Street was packed with protesters and young students attacking policemen and IRGC officials. The police had installed a barricade around Mehrabad Airport and Imam Khomeini International Airport fearing that the protesters were planning to attack them and had also blocked all streets leading to the Interior Ministry, where protesters were burning tires outside of the building and throwing rocks and Molotov cocktails.[3]

In an attempt to prevent the spread of information, many internet sites have been blocked, especially social networking sites such as Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, foreign broadcasting websites, and reformist websites as well. Text and SMS, and international calls from Tehran were blocked, and by late Sunday, the cell phone services had been shut down.

Reporters from the Italian public television broadcaster RAI stated that one of its interpreters was beaten with clubs by riot police and the officers then confiscated the cameraman's tapes.[8] Also several BBC cameramen were beaten and arrested by IRGC officials and had their tapes confiscated.[26][27]

By the middle of the day, the protests had spread to Ahwaz, Shiraz, Gorgan, Tabriz, Rasht, Babol, and Mashhad where they have been increasing in size. On June 14, large scale protests had broken out in Naqsh-e Jahan Square in Isfahan. Protests are reported in Zahedan, Qazvin, Sari, Karaj, Tabriz, Shahsavar, Orumieh, Bandar Abbas, Arak, Birjend.[28] Since riot police are largely limited to Tehran, the IRGC and the Basij have been dispatched to quell protests in other cities.

Al Jazeera English described the situation as the "biggest unrest since the 1979 revolution." It also reported that protests seemed spontaneous without any formal organization.[29]

According to Ynetnews, by June 14, two people had died in the rioting.[21]

On June 14, protests were organized outside the United Nations in New York City;[30] in front of the Iranian embassies in Paris,[31] Berlin,[32] London, and Iranian consulate in Sydney;[33] and in a public square in Toronto.[34] Protests also occurred in Kuala Lumpur,[35] Los Angeles,[36] San Diego,[37] San Francisco [38] and Dubai.[39] Other protests had been organized in front of the Iranian embassies in Turkey, Paris,[40] Berlin,[40] London,[41] Rome,[42] Vienna,[40] and The Hague.[43]

On the night between the June 14 and 15, 15 students were severely injured by beating or killed when police and basij brutally attacked Tehran University dormitories. Many of the students were not expecting the unprovoked attack and were not involved in any civil disturbance at the time.[44] On June 14, 120 faculty members of Sharif University of Technology resigned in protest of the alleged electoral fraud and began a protest against Ahmadinejad's re-election as President.[45]

Iranian authorities arrested more than 100 prominent anti-government figures during the unrest,[46] including Abdolfattah Soltani, Abdolreza Tajik, Saeed Hajjarian, and former Vice President of Iran Mohammad Ali Abtahi.[47]

Also on June 14, tens of thousands of people rallied in central Tehran to celebrate the re-election of Ahmadinejad.[48] The crowd consisted of local Tehran residents as well as bussed in regime diehards from the provinces.[citation needed] A photo of the rally that appears in a screenshot of the Iranian newspaper Kayhan[2] was photoshopped in order to add volume to the crowd.[49]

June 15

On June 15, Mousavi made his first post-election appearance with a varied number of people presented as either more than 3,000,000[50][51] or millions of his supporters in a rally in Tehran, despite being warned by state officials that any such rally would be illegal.[52][53] This formed a five mile (9 km) long crowd.[54] Shots were fired from a compound used by Basij pro-government militia, allegedly killing seven demonstrators. The shots were fired after the crowd allegedly attacked the militia's compound. Iranian authorities have arrested one man over the shooting.[13][55] Besides this incident, the protest appeared peaceful. The pro-government Basij militiamen largely stayed on the sidelines after having been stunned by the magnitude of the protesting crowd.[56]

Several rallies of smaller scale took place in other Iranian cities.[57]

The protesters gathered at Freedom Square in Tehran, chanted "Death to the dictator", in a strong rebuke against the election outcome, while also chanting "Mousavi! Mousavi!" in support of the former prime minister and using slogans dating to the 1979 Islamic Revolution. People have chanted "God is Great" ("Allahu Akbar") from their rooftops, and youths have driven around the city with green ribbons in support of Mousavi. A protest was planned for June 16.[56]

Protests across the world continued on June 15 in Montreal at Place des Art.[58] In Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia police fired tear gas to break up a protest at the city's United Nations building.[59] A couple hundred Chicago Iranian-Americans protested on June 16 to support for the Iranians living in Iran. Hundreds of Iranian expatriates were joined by Danes in a demonstration supporting Mousavi's backers in Copenhagen.[60]

June 16

On June 16, thousands of people began massing the streets of Tehran again, in what is believed to be a protest "even bigger" than Monday's.[61][62] Due to the difficulties faced by foreign reporters, no international old media centers have yet declared a sophisticated report on the rallies. However, footage showing violence in the crowds appeared on various Internet networks almost immediately after it took place. There is a report of special police keeping Basijs and demonstrators separated.[63] Neil MacFarquhar of The New York Times said on June 16, "The question mark remains how long Iran’s rulers will tolerate the demonstrations, and indeed how long the protesters will stay in the streets until what many analysts expect will be a Tiananmen moment."[64]

Over 120 Tehran University professors who had resigned in protest of violence against students joined the protests after security forces violently raided university dormitories.[65]

The Guardian Council said on the 16th that it was prepared to order only a partial recount, and it ruled out an annulment of the vote.[62] The concession was rejected by the main opposition candidate, Mir-Hossein Mousavi, demanding that a new election be held.[62]

June 17

The Iranian national football team played against South Korea's team in Seoul. Some members of the Iranian team wore green armbands in the first half of the match but were forced to remove their pro-Mousavi emblems in the second half. In the second half of the match against South Korea, only Mehdi Mahdavikia wore the symbol in support of Mousavi.[66]

Another demonstration was held in Tehran on June 17 centering around the 7 Tir Square. Estimates of the number of participants ranged between 70,000 and 500,000.[67]

June 18

Candle-bearing protesters massed in central Tehran on Thursday near Toopkhaneh square, even as the Iranian government made its first move toward some form of dialogue to defuse the outrage over last week’s disputed presidential election, with an invitation from the country’s powerful Guardian Council to the three major challengers to meet to discuss their grievances.[68] Mousavi has called for the protest to commemorate those who were killed on Monday's protests.[67] Varying reports have placed the crowd size between "tens of thousands"[69] to "more than 100,000."[70] A second, and simultaneous protest, also took place near the UN headquarters consisting of several hundred protesters.

Reports have begun surfacing of discreet efforts by reformists to identify Basij and police members who have conducted violence against protesters. Consequently, the Basij have begun to wear balaclavas to prevent their identification.[citation needed] A counter rally was held by hard line students protesting former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani's role in the pro-Mousavi protests.[70]

June 19

No protests have been publicly declared for Friday June 19,[71] but Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei spoke about the previous protests during his scheduled television appearance.[71] According to him, "media belonging to Zionists, evil media," were trying to divide the state and Western powers are casting doubts on the election. But "there are 40 million votes for the revolution, not just 24 million for the chosen president," he said, confirming the official result for President Ahmadinejad and claiming that this "was a competition among people who believe in the state."[72]

He announced not to be willing to give in to "illegal pressures," saying that "street challenge is not acceptable", and instructed the protesters to pursue their complaints through legal channels while questioning "How can 11 million votes be replaced or changed?” The blame was put on the opposition leaders "responsible for bloodshed and chaos" if they do not stop the demonstrations.[72] The sermon is interpreted by AFP as giving "green light" to the security forces to use violence to quell the protests.[73]

Part of the speech was devoted to rebutting accusations of corruption against former President Rafsanjani,[72] who was accused of corruption by President Ahmadinejad and had brought this before the Supreme Leader. Rafsanjani is a politically influential figure and the leader of the Assembly of Experts that appoints the Supreme Leader.[74] His open backup of the the pro-Mousavi demonstrations is not liked by all demonstrating Iranians[74] leading to a counter rally the day before by hard line students protesting his role in the movement.[70]

Hours after Khamenei's speech, defeated candidate Mehdi Karoubi called for election results to be cancelled.”[75]

Mousavi spokesman Mohsen Makhmalbaf said "Mousavi's headquarters was wrecked by plainclothes police officers" with many staffers arrested, and Mousavi himself ordered by the Revolutionary Guard to stay silent. Makhmalbaf said his job was "to urge people to take to the streets because Mousavi could not do so directly".[76]

Both houses of the US Congress condemned violence against demonstrators by the Iranian government.[77]

June 20

State-run television reported that at least 10 were killed and 100 injured on Saturday, as thousands of protesters swept into the streets of Tehran. The protests were held in open defiance of warnings issued Friday by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and the country's Security Council. Those authorities had said that protest organizers—specifically Moussavi—would be held accountable if the protests led to bloodshed. According to state-run television, on late Saturday authorities arrested the daughter and four other relatives of ex-President Hashemi Rafsanjani, head of the Assembly of Experts and the Expediency Council, as well as a vocal critic of Ahmadinejad.[78]

The International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran said numerous protesters who had been beaten and injured by security forces were arrested and detained when they sought medical treatment in hospitals. It said fear of arrest had reportedly driven injured protesters, some in serious condition, to seek care at foreign embassies.[79] A young Iranian woman, identified as Neda Soltani,[80] was shot by the Basij and died in front of recording cameras on Karekar Avenue in Tehran.[81] Highly graphic amateur videos of the killing rapidly spread virally across the internet to many websites, including Facebook and YouTube.[82]

On Saturday night, the Iranian state-run news agency IRINN said an attacker had been killed earlier in the day outside Tehran at the entrance to the mausoleum that holds the body of former Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The agency said the man "carrying the bomb" was killed, and there were no other casualties. Press TV was reporting that the bomber was the sole fatality, and that three other people were wounded at the shrine to Khomeini.[79]

In a statement posted on the website of his Kalemeh newspaper, Mousavi repeated his demand for the elections results to be annulled and hit out at a speech by Khamenei. "If this huge volume of cheating and changing the votes ... which has hurt people's trust, is presented as the very evidence of the lack of cheating, then it will butcher the republican aspect of the system and the idea that Islam is incompatible with a republic will be proven," he said.[83] An ally of Mousavi reported through Facebook that the opposition leader had told his supporters that he was ready for martyrdom[84] and had called for a general strike.[85]

Reports surfaced late Saturday of raids by the Basiji militia in wealthy Tehran neighborhoods.[79]

State television quoted a council spokesman as saying that the Guardian Council had expressed its readiness to "randomly" recount up to 10 per cent of the ballots.[83] The state television also broadcasted a speech by the Speaker of the Parliament (Majlis), Ali Larijani, declaring that "a majority of people are of the opinion that the actual election results are different than what was officially announced." According to Khabar online[86] Larijani also pointed out that "The opinion of this majority should be respected and a line should be drawn between them and rioters and miscreants".[87]

Worldwide solidarity protests took place in New York, Los Angeles, at the gates of the White House,[88] outside of Paris and in Brussels.[89] US-based human rights group Human Rights Watch and US President Barack Obama both issued statements urging the Iranian government to end violence against protesters.[79][90]

June 21

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki rebuked Britain, France and Germany for raising questions about reports of voting irregularities. Mottaki charged France with taking "treacherous and unjust approaches," and accused Britain of flying intelligence agents into Iran before the election to interfere with the vote. The election, he insisted, was a "very transparent competition." British Foreign Secretary David Miliband categorically denied the charge against his country, adding: "This can only damage Iran's standing in the eyes of the world."[78]

Government reaction

Arrests

On the weekend of 13 and 14 June, in a series of raids across Tehran, the government arrested over 170 people, according to police officials.[91] Among them were prominent reformist politicians, including MIRO founder Behzad Nabavi, IIPF leader Mohsen Mirdamadi, and former president Mohammad Khatami's brother Mohammad-Reza Khatami, who was later released.[92][93][94] Also arrested were Mostafa Tajzadeh and Mohsen Aminzadeh, whom the IRNA said were involved in orchestrating protests on 13 June.[93] Anonymous sources said that the police stormed the headquarters of the IIPF and arrested a number of people.[8][19] Iranian journalist Mashallah Shamsolvaezin claimed that presidential candidate Mir-Hossein Mousavi was put under house arrest, although officials denied this.[95] An estimated 200 people were detained after clashes with students at Tehran university, although many were later released.[96]

Acting Police Chief Ahmad-Reza Radan stated via the state press service on the 14th that “in the interrogation of related rebels, we intend to find the link between the plotters and foreign media".[97] A judiciary spokesman said they had not been arrested but that they were summoned, "warned not to increase tension," and later released.[98] Intelligence minister Gholam Hossein Mohseni-Ejehei linked some arrests to terrorism supported from outside Iran, stating that "more than 20 explosive consignments were discovered".[99] Others, he said, were "counter-revolutionary groups" who had "penetrated election headquarters" of the election candidates.[99]

On 16 June, Reuters reported that former vice-president Mohammad-Ali Abtahi and former presidential advisor Saeed Hajjarian had been arrested.[100] Human rights lawyer Abdolfattah Soltani, who had been demanding a recount of all votes, was also arrested on the the Tuesday according to Shirin Ebadi, who said that security officials had posed as clients.[101] Over 100 students were arrested after security forces fired tear gas at protesters at Shiraz university on the same day.[96] Reporters Without Borders reported that 5 of 11 arrested journalists were still detention as of 16 June, and that a further 10 journalists were unaccounted for and may have been arrested.[96]

On 17 June, former foreign minister and Secretary-General of the Freedom Movement of Iran, Ebrahim Yazdi, was arrested while undergoing tests at the Tehran hospital.[96] In Tabriz, other Freedom Movement activists and eight members of the IIPF were arrested, with reports of at least 100 civic figures' arrests.[96] The total number of arrests across Iran since the election was reported as 500.[96]

Aaron Rhodes, a spokesman for the international campaign for human rights in Iran, stated that "Iranian intelligence and security forces are using the public protests to engage in what appears to be a major purge of reform-oriented individuals whose situations in detention could be life-threatening".[96]

In Esfahan Province, prosecutor-general Mohammadreza Habibi warned that dissidents could face the death penalty under Islamic law.[102] He also accused the protesters of being a "few elements controlled by foreigners", who were "disrupting security by inciting individuals to destroy and to commit arson" and urged them to stop their "criminal activities". It was not clear if his warning applied only to Isfahan or to the country as a whole. [103]

Militia violence

Several Basij members have been filmed breaking into houses and shooting into crowds.[104][105][106][107][108] A number of hospital staff protested after people have been transported to the hospitals dead or in critical condition because of gunshots. One person has been brought to the hospital after he was killed by a sniper shot to the head.[109]

The IRG and the Basij also attacked Universities and students' dorms at night, destroying property and killing students.[110][111][112]

The Los Angeles Times reported that militiamen from the hard-line Iran-based Ansar-e Hezbollah group "warned that they would be patrolling the streets to maintain law and order."[113]

A female journalist, writing for Der Spiegel, witnessed Arabic-speaking Gardisten (IRG) using chains as weapons against a fleeing crowd of demonstrants. There is a minority of Iranian Arabs living in the south of the country. However, in the same June 16, 2009 article Der Spiegel reported that Voice of America had a report that the Iranian government recruited up to 5,000 fighters (sizeable compared to estimates of their numbers) from the Lebanese Hezbollah militia to clash with protesters.[114]

Two Iranian protesters interviewed by a reporter from the The Jerusalem Post on June 16, 2009 said that "Palestinian forces" were helping the Iranian authorities crush street protests.[115]

Censorship

News media

According to the Telegraph, on 14 June "Iran's regime was doing its utmost to choke off the flow of news from its capital."[116] Al Jazeera English has leveled allegations of direct media censorship by the Iranian government, stating that "some of the newspapers have been given notices to change their editorials or their main headlines".[117] The Al Arabiya's offices in Tehran were closed on June 14 for a week by Iranian authorities, who gave no explanation for the decision.[118] NBC News offices in Tehran were raided, with cameras and other equipment confiscated. Meanwhile, the director of BBC World Service accused the Iranian Government of jamming its broadcasts to the country. Peter Horrocks said audiences in Iran, the Middle East and Europe had been affected by an electronic block on satellites used to broadcast the BBC Persian Television signal to Iran, adding: "It seems to be part of a pattern of behaviour by the Iranian authorities to limit the reporting of the aftermath of the disputed election".[27][94] A BBC corporate official has referred to the network's conflict with the regime as 'electronic warfare'.[119]

On June 16, the Ministry of Culture issued a directive banning all foreign media from leaving their offices.[120] This directive stipulated that international news outlets could still talk about rallies in their live reports, however they were not allowed to leave their hotel rooms and offices to witness the protests. Iranian government-run television was not affected by the restrictions.[121] On June 20, the Ministry of Culture intensified the restrictions by banning international media from reporting on the demonstrations altogether unless they received permission from Iranian authorities.[122]

BBC correspondent John Simpson was arrested, his material confiscated, and then released.[123] Reporters from the Italian public television broadcaster RAI stated that one of its interpreters was beaten with clubs by riot police and the officers then confiscated the cameraman's tapes.[8] ABC News reporter Jim Sciutto has also had material taken. People from the German public broadcasters ZDF and ARD have been harassed as well, with men carrying batons and knives reportedly storming the ARD's Tehran office.[citation needed]

Ahmadinejad responded to civil liberties concerns by stating Iranians enjoyed "absolute freedom" of speech. "Don't worry about freedom in Iran ... Newspapers come and go and reappear. Don't worry about it."[124]

Internet

On Saturday following the elections, Mir Hossein Mousavi's supporters started DDoS attacks against president[125] Ahmadinejad's site and exchanged attack tools through sites such as Facebook and Twitter.[126] After the attacks, the government stopped internet access.[126] On 13 June as the election results were being announced, Iran shut down all Internet access for about 45 minutes, then restarted it apparently with lower bandwidth; this may have been in order to set up filters to block sites like YouTube that could be used for political purposes.[127] When thousands of opposition supporters clashed with the police on 13 June, Facebook was filtered again. Some news websites were also blocked by the Iranian authorities. Mobile phone services including text messaging also stopped or became very difficult to use.[29] Specifically, all websites affiliated with the BBC were shut off,[22] as well as those affiliated with The Guardian.[citation needed] Associated Press labeled the actions "ominous measures apparently seeking to undercut liberal voices".[8]

The restrictions were likely intended to prevent Mousavi's supporters from organizing large-scale protests.[98] The protesters have used phone calls, e-mail, and word of mouth to get around the measures.[101] In response to the crackdown, anti-regime activists have repeatedly taken down Ahmadinejad's and Khamenei's websites.

Statements by Iranian figures

Government figures

  • Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei initially urged the nation to unite behind Ahmadinejad, labeling a victory by him as a "divine assessment."[8] On June 15, however, Iran's supreme leader ordered an investigation into the claims of vote fraud.[128] Referring to Mousavi's appeal letter about the irregularities, Khamenei said that "the Guardian Council has been emphasized to carry out investigation into this letter carefully," and probe allegations of Ahmadinejad cheating.[129] On 19 June he condemned the conduct of the Western World during the elections, claiming that the United Kingdom is the most "evil".[130]
  • Interior Minister Sadeq Mahsouli said that he had not received any "written complaint" about election fraud or irregularities. He also remarked that the vote proceeded in a way that "ruled out the possibility of cheating."[131]
  • Chairman of the Assembly of Experts Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani was reported to have called a meeting of the Assembly, as they have the constitutional power to elect and dismiss the Supreme Leader.[132]
  • Speaker of Parliament Ali Larijani condemned the attack by police and militia at Tehran University, saying that the "interior minister is responsible in this regard."[133] After the showdown on June 20, he implied that the election authority sided with one candidate.[134]

Candidates

  • Incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in a live address on state run television on 13 June, called the election "completely free" and the outcome "a great victory" for Iran. He also said, "[t]oday, the people of Iran have inspired other nations and disappointed their ill-wishers... propaganda facilities outside Iran and sometimes inside Iran were totally mobilized against our people." Ahmadinejad praised the country’s youth as well, but made no direct mention of the protests.[29] He later dismissed the protests, comparing them to "the passions after a football match."[94]
  • Mir-Hossein Mousavi, the main opposition candidate, issued a statement saying, "I'm warning that I won't surrender to this manipulation." Mousavi lodged an official appeal against the result to the Guardian Council on 14 June.[4] He is not optimistic about his appeal, saying that many of the group's members "during the election were not impartial".[11]
  • Reformist cleric Mehdi Karroubi, another opposition candidate, echoed Mr. Moussavi’s demand for the election to be canceled. He said, "I am announcing again that the elections should not be allowed and the results have no legitimacy or social standing... Therefore, I do not consider Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president of the republic."[92] He later declared in a speech to his supporters in Khoramabad that "this phase [Election dispute] will not subside until we [Reformist leaders] suggest so".[135]
  • Conservative candidate Mohsen Rezai, on 17 June, gave an ultimatum to Interior Ministry to release details of the results by that day, otherwise he would call for re-election. He said "The unprecedented delay has raised doubts about the possibility of manipulation in the results."[136]

Clerics

  • The Combatant Clergy Association, a moderate clerical body headed by Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, issued a statement posted on reformist web sites saying the election was rigged and calling for it to be canceled, warning that "if this process becomes the norm, the republican aspect of the regime will be damaged and people will lose confidence in the system."[92]
  • In a letter published on his website, reformist cleric Grand Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri stated that government used elections "in the worst way possible. Declaring results that no one in their right mind can believe, and despite all the evidence of crafted results, and to counter people protestations, in front of the eyes of the same nation who carried the weight of a revolution and 8 years of war, in front of the eyes of local and foreign reporters, attacked the children of the people with astonishing violence. And now they are attempting a purge, arresting intellectuals, political opponents and scientists."[137]

Exiled groups

  • People's Mujahedin of Iran leader Maryam Rajavi said "The religious dictatorship and all its suppressive institutions must be done away with so that the Iranian people can hold free UN-supervised elections." [3]
  • The Tudeh Party of Iran declared that "the Supreme Leader and the coup d’état perpetrators under his leadership must be defeated vigilantly and by relying on the power of the masses." [4]
  • The Worker-Communist Party of Iran call for "the overthrow of the Islamic regime". It launched a six-points minimal program[138] and call women to remove their veils.[139] It's satelite TV, New Channel, broadcast in Iran.[140]
  • Reza Cyrus Pahlavi, son of the former Shah of Iran Mohammad Reza Pahlavi who was ousted in 1979, said: "I would love to help them [the protesters] reach complete, real freedom under a secular democratic system where there's a true separation of religion from government."[141]

Other

  • Gholam Ali Haddad Adel, a former Iranian parliamentary speaker and father in law of Khameni's son, called on Moussavi to concede defeat, saying that then "everyone will benefit".[142]
  • Former Foreign Minister Ibrahim Yazdi has said, "[w]e don't have any doubt. And as far as we are concerned, it is not legitimate. There were many, many irregularities." He also described the process as a "coup".[143] On 17 June, he was arrested and transferred to prison.[119]
  • Reformist politician Ata'ollah Mohajerani blasted the election as "The End of the Islamic Republic".[119]
  • Hadi Ghaemi, spokesman for the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, denounced the outcome. He also compared the government's post-election activities to those of the Chinese government during the Tiananmen Square protests.[8]
  • About eight players in the Iran national football team playing in their World Cup qualifier wore green wristbands in support for Mousavi [119][144] for the first half of their game. During the break, they were ordered to remove them, seven of the eight complied. They were subsequently suspended.
  • Popular classical musician Mohammad Reza Shajarian demanded that Iranian government television and radio never play his music again after Ahmadinejad called Mousavi supporters "brushwood and thorns". Shajarian remarked, "my voice is like brushwood and thorns".[119]
  • A group of Iranian "artists and writers in exile" published an open letter in support of the protests.[145]

Since June 12, the Iranian film director Mohsen Makhmalbaf has been serving as the official spokesman of Mir-Hossein Moussavi's campaign abroad.[146]

International response

  • On 15 June, EU foreign ministers meeting in Luxembourg issued a joint statement expressing concern about the use of violence against peaceful demonstrators in Tehran. "This is a situation that the Iranian authorities must investigate," their statement said.[147]
  • British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said on 16 June: "There must be no violence in response to peaceful protests... the relationship they [the Iranian authorities] will have and the respect they will have from the rest of the world will depend on how they respond to what are legitimate grievances that are being expressed and have to be answered."[148] C.f. 2009 G-20 London summit protests
  • French foreign minister Bernard Kouchner called the government response to the protests "brutal".[149] On 16 June, President Nicolas Sarkozy said the unrest was a direct result of Ahmadinejad's failings in his first term.[150] "The extent of the fraud is proportional to the violent reaction," Sarkozy added.[150]
  • German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced that "the German government is very concerned about the current situation." She also criticised the use of "completely unacceptable force against protesters," the "wave of arrests" during the demonstrations and the fact that foreign media were being hampered from reporting on the developments.[147][151]
  • On 16 June, Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen summoned an Iranian diplomat to protest Tehran's crackdown on protesters and to call for the immediate release of detainees. He also protested against interference with foreign journalists and the arrest of a Dutch television crew, and demanded an explanation from the Iranian authorities for the intimidation and seizure of footage of Dutch journalists.[152]
  • The Polish Foreign Ministry announced: "[The ministry] calls on the government in Tehran to avoid actions which could result in bloodshed, and also expects the government to take responsibility for finding a peaceful solution to the crisis, according to its obligations within the international community."[153]
  • On 16 June, Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith told Parliament: "We are very gravely concerned about the very serious breaches of human rights we have seen."[154]
  • Canadian Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon said: "The security force's brutal treatment of peaceful demonstrators is unacceptable." Canada also summoned Iran's top diplomat to explain the reported beating and detention of a freelance Canadian journalist in Tehran.[155]
  • Vice President of the United States Joe Biden said, "[i]t sure looks like the way they're suppressing speech, the way they're suppressing crowds, the way in which people are being treated, that there's some real doubt [about the true election results]".[124] On 15 June, State Department spokesman Ian Kelly declared that the US was "deeply troubled by the reports of violent arrests and possible voting irregularities."[156] President Obama echoed the statement later that day.[119] The President has been criticized for not showing more support for the demonstrators.[157] The New York Times reported that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had hoped Obama would lend more vocal support to the demonstrators,[158] although the State Department insists that Clinton and Obama are in agreement.[159] On the other hand, several commentators such as United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations chairman John Kerry[160] (Democrat) and ranking Republican Richard Lugar,[161] or former Nixon Secretary of State and McCain advisor Henry Kissinger,[162] support Obama's muted response, arguing that any hint of United States intervention would only hurt the protesters by helping Ahmadinejad to portray them as US puppets. On June 19, the United States House of Representatives voted 405-to-1 in support of a resolution supporting "all Iranians who embrace the values of freedom, human rights, civil liberties and the rule of law" and condemning "ongoing violence against demonstrators."[163] On June 20, the White House released a statement by way of President Obama on the events in Iran stating, "We call on the Iranian government to stop all violent and unjust actions against its own people. The universal rights to assembly and free speech must be respected, and the United States stands with all who seek to exercise those rights."[164]
  • Japanese Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone said on 16 June: "We are extremely concerned about the confusion in Iran. We are carefully monitoring the situation... We hear about shootings. We hope that the situation will come to an end as soon as possible."[148]
  • On 16 June, Foreign Minister of New Zealand Murray McCully said: "The New Zealand government is concerned at the reports coming out of Iran of mounting violence, and calls on all involved to help restore calm... New Zealand shares the view of United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, and several European Union leaders, that the election process needs to be carefully explained."[165]
  • Norwegian Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre said: "There is much unrest in Iran around the results, and there are allegations of electoral fraud. This is alarming".[166]
  • On 18 June, the Foreign Minister of Sweden Carl Bildt stated in a public pronouncement concerning the violence: "It is obvious that this is totally unacceptable". "It is now of utter importance that the authorities respect the complaints which have been directed at the election and the counting of votes; and handle those in a correct and transparent manner".[167]
  • Bermudan Premier Ewart Brown expressed outrage over the Iranian government's violent acts against its people, saying "The free world must stand on the side of democracy and human rights. The Iranian government has crossed the line."

Use of social networking

The Internet and, specifically, social networking has been instrumental to organizing many of the protests in Iran.[168] Online sites have been uploading amateur pictures and video, and Twitter, Facebook, and blogs have been places for protesters to gather and exchange information.[168] Twitter has also been used to organize protests.[169][170]

Through social networking sites Mir Hossein Mousavi's supporters exchanged scripts for launching distributed denial of service attacks (DDoS) against Ahmadinejad's website.[126][170] British citizens were reported to support the DDoS attacks against president Ahmadinejad by providing software for launching them.[171] The DDoS attacks have slowed down connections throughout Iran and those who have been DDoSing websites have been asked to call off their attacks to help the Green party communicate.[citation needed]

Twitter in particular has been a key central gathering site during the protests.[172] The U.S. State Department urged the company to postpone a scheduled network upgrade that would have briefly put the service offline.[173][174] Twitter delayed the network upgrade from midnight American time/morning Iran time to afternoon American time/midnight Iran time "because events in Iran were tied directly to the growing significance of Twitter as an important communication and information network".[175][176]

Some foreign activists, including Anonymous, have engaged in DDoS attacks against Iranian ISPs, but their actions have been criticised as cutting off Internet access for protesters within Iranian borders.[citation needed] Many anti-Ahmedinejad activists have attacked the websites of Ahmedinejad and the government, rendering them inaccessible. The government's official website (ahmedinejad.ir) has at various times been rendered inaccessible.[177]

Aside from social networking sites being used by protesters to gather and exchange information, individuals around the world used these sites to gain news and information on the events in Iran. Due to strict foreign media censorship by the Iranian government, social networking sites became the primary source of information, videos, and testimonials of the protests occurring in Iran. Major news outlets, such as CNN[178] and BBC News,[179] gained much of their information from utilizing and sorting through tweets by Twitter users and videos uploaded to YouTube. However, The Economist magazine stated that the Twitter thread IranElection was so deluged with messages of support from Americans and Britons that it "rendered the site almost useless as a source of information—something that Iran’s government had tried and failed to do." The Economist asserted that the most comprehensive sources of information in English by far were created by bloggers who pulled out useful information from the mass of information, of whom it singles out Nico Pitney of the Huffington Post, Andrew Sullivan of The Atlantic and Robert Mackey of the New York Times.[180]

See also

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External links

Media coverage
In pictures
Communication
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/06/20/iran.election/index.html

TEHRAN, Iran (CNN)  -- The main opposition candidate in Iran, Mir Hossein Moussavi, was said to be ready for "martyrdom" Saturday as thousands of protesters clashed with police in protests that defied warnings from Iran's supreme leaders.

 Security forces made "a very large show of force" in midtown and southeastern Tehran, using tear gas and clubs to beat back protesters as clashes erupted during the unrest.

This comes as demonstrators emerged on city streets to protest last week's elections in defiance of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's Friday pronouncement that protests must end.

Meanwhile, the Facebook page of Iran's top opposition leader quoted the politician Saturday as saying he is preparing to die.

Moussavi, who has led a protest against the government for the June 12 election, said he is preparing himself for "martyrdom."

The authenticity of the message could not immediately be established.

In Tehran, police fired guns in the air, and Iran's Press TV also reported the use of water cannons to disperse protesters.

 Uniformed and plainclothes police were deployed around Revolution Square, the site of a major planned demonstration, and traffic was being turned away on a major thoroughfare leading to the square, a witness said.

The forces confronted demonstrators who tried to avoid the thoroughfare and take side streets toward the square. Clashes erupted as forces used clubs to beat back protesters.

Periodically, groups of armed police would fire rifles into the air to disperse protesters along the side streets near Revolution Square.

 Cell phone service was brought down after 5:30 p.m. in the area, witnesses said.

Police told protesters they had no permit to protest.

 Police also said Saturday that 400 security forces had been injured during the week's heavy demonstrations, and that public property had been damaged, Press TV reported.

Three camouflaged men with shields were seen pushing a man in the opposite direction. The number of people on the streets and the traffic appears less than normal, but daily life is going on.

A few thousand people who attempted to enter the site of a major planned demonstration in Tehran were blocked by heavily armed police, a witness said.

Another witness said he was walking through a central square when he saw about 200 men with the Basiji militia, a security force that takes orders from the Iranian government. With some wearing government-issued helmets and shields, their presence was a hint of an ominous security presence.

Elsewhere, another witness said hundreds of protesters were walking a mile from Revolution Square when some militia men dropped two tear gas canisters among the crowd to apparently dissuade them from gathering.

Some of the crowd turned back to regroup.

rmed police were seen in two of the Tehran squares where major demonstrations were to be held Saturday, a journalist there said.

Two rallies had been scheduled to begin about 4 p.m. (7:30 a.m. ET) Saturday to protest a disputed presidential election, despite stern admonishments from Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who on Friday warned that protest organizers would be held responsible if the demonstrations led to bloodshed.

Khamenei also declared the election a "definitive victory" for President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and rejected allegations of vote-rigging .

 Two people were killed and eight people were injured in a blast at the mausoleum of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in southern Tehran, Press TV reported .

One of the dead was the attacker, the station said.

Khomeini was the father of the Islamic Revolution that swept the shah of Iran from power in 1979. He is regarded as the founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran. CNN could not independently confirm reports of a blast or who or what may have caused it. News coverage in Iran has been limited by government restrictions on international journalists.

One scheduled rally was sponsored by supporters of Moussavi and Mehdi Karrubi, another of the three candidates who ran against Ahmadinejad in elections June 12. iReport.com: Share images from Iran

"Often these protests can take on a life of their own, and if the leaders call off the protest, that does not mean the people will not come out on the streets and there will not be a resulting crackdown," said Reva Bhalla, an analyst with Stratfor, a global intelligence firm.

Many who said they planned to attend the rallies wrote to one another on the social networking site Twitter early Saturday. Some wondered whether there would be violence at the protests.

"Let the Qu'ran shield you. It's a mortal sin to kill anyone holding the Qu'ran. BRING your Qu'ran to protest!!!" one person wrote on Twitter. "We will try 2 keep this rally peaceful/silent as usual at every cost. Cant give them excuse 2 use force. Hope they wont," another said.

CNN is not using the posters' names for safety reasons. Both said they were in Iran, but CNN could not verify that.

The supreme leader called on those who don't believe the election results to use legal avenues, such as requesting a recounting of ballots in their presence.

Meanwhile, the Iranian government said Saturday it was ready to randomly recount up to 10 percent of "ballot boxes."

The Guardian Council, which supervises the country's elections, invited three candidates -- Moussavi, Karrubi and Mohsen Rezaie -- to its meeting Saturday, according to the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency.

Two of them, Moussavi and Karrubi, failed to show up. After Khamenei's speech Saturday, Amnesty International said his message "indicates the authorities' readiness to launch violent crackdowns if people continue to protest, which may cause a widespread loss of life."

A top U.N. human rights official also said she was concerned about reports of excessive force and arrests at the protests. "The legal basis of the arrests that have been taking place, especially those of human rights defenders and political activists, is not clear," said Navi Pillay, high commissioner for human rights.

 The government has maintained that the post-election death toll stands at seven. Amnesty International said on Friday that reports suggest up to 15 people have died.

An activist told CNN that the death toll had climbed to 32, with 12 of those victims in Tehran. Because of the Iranian government's restrictions on news gathering, CNN could not independently verify the reports.
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large mob June 20, 2009
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Tehran - 20 June 2009 Iranians protest against election results, Iranian riot police used tear gas
1:30
Tehran - (20 June 2009) Iranians protest against election results Tear Gas bombs thrown @ them! 30 KHORDAD :: THE WORLD IS WATCHING ::
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6 hours ago 301 views
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AP

  By ALI AKBAR DAREINI and NASSER KARIMI, Associated Press Writers Ali Akbar Dareini And Nasser Karimi, Associated Press Writers   – 7 mins ago

TEHRAN, Iran – Police beat protesters and fired tear gas and water cannons at thousands who rallied Saturday in open defiance of Iran's clerical government, sharply escalating the most serious internal conflict since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Witnesses described fierce clashes after some 3,000 protesters, many wearing black, chanted "Death to the dictator!" and "Death to dictatorship!" near Revolution Square in downtown Tehran. Police fired tear gas, water cannons and guns but it was not clear if they were firing live ammunition.

Some protesters appeared to be fighting back, setting fire to militia members' motorcycles, witnesses said. There were no immediate confirmed reports of fatalities and the head of Iran's police said his men had been ordered to act with restraint.

"We acted with leniency but I think from today on, we should resume law and confront more seriously," General Esmaeil Ahmadi Moghadam said on state television. "The events have become exhausting, bothersome and intolerable. I want them to take the police cautions seriously because we will definitely show a serious confrontation against those who violate rules."

Police and militia were blocking protesters from gathering on the main thoroughfare running east from Revolution Square to Freedom Square, the witnesses said.

A massive rally in Freedom Square Monday set off three consecutive days of protests demanding the government cancel and rerun June 12 elections that ended with a declaration of overwhelming victory for hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Reformist presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi says he won and Ahmadinejad stole the election through widespread fraud.

Mousavi has not been seen since a rally Thursday, but late Saturday he repeated his demand for the election to be annulled.

In a letter to Iran's Guardian Council, which investigates voting fraud allegations, Mousavi listed violations that he says are proof that the June 12 vote should be annulled. He said some ballot boxes had been sealed before voting began, thousands of his representatives had been expelled from polling stations and some mobile polling stations had ballot boxes filled with fake ballots.

"The Iranian nation will not believe this unjust and illegal" act, Mousavi said in the letter published on one of his official Web sites.

But Mousavi did not say whether he endorsed ongoing street protests or the country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who sternly warned opposition leaders to end rallies or be held responsible for "the bloodshed, the violence and rioting" to come.

Khamenei's statement during Friday prayers effectively closed the door to Mousavi's demand for a new election.

As reports of street clashes became public, Iran's English-language state TV said that a suicide bombing at the shrine of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini about 12 miles (20 kilometers) south of central Tehran had killed one person and wounded eight. The report could not be independently confirmed due to government restrictions on independent reporting.

The channel also confirmed that police had used batons and other non-lethal weapons against what it called unauthorized demonstrations.

Amateur video showed dozens of Iranians running down a street after police fired tear gas at them. Shouts of "Allahu Akbar!" — "God is Great" — could be heard on the video, which could not be independently verified.

Helicopters hovered, ambulances raced through the streets and black smoke rose over the city.

The witnesses told The Associated Press that between 50 and 60 protesters were hospitalized after beatings by police and pro-government militia. People could be seen dragging away comrades bloodied by baton strikes.

Police clashed with protesters around Tehran immediately after the presidential election. Gunfire from a militia compound left at least seven dead, but further force had remained in check until Saturday.

Eyewitnesses said thousands of police and plainclothes militia members filled the streets to prevent rallies. Fire trucks took up positions in Revolution Square and riot police surrounded Tehran University, the site of recent clashes between protesters and security forces, one witness said.

Tehran Province Police Chief Ahmad Reza Radan said that police would "crack down on any gathering or protest rally which are being planned by some people." The head of the State Security Council also reiterated a warning to Mousavi that he would be held responsible if he encouraged protests.

Tehran University, which sits in the heart of downtown Tehran, was cordoned off by police and militia while students inside the university chanted "Death to the dictator!" witnesses said.

Shouts of "Viva Mousavi!" also could be heard. Witnesses said protesters wore black as a symbol of mourning for the dead and the allegedly stolen election, with wristbands in green, the emblem of Mousavi's self-described "Green Wave" movement.

All witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity because they feared government reprisals for speaking with the press. Iranian authorities have placed strict limits on the ability of foreign media to cover recent events, banning reporting from the street and allowing only phone interviews and information from officials sources such as state TV.

"I think the regime has taken an enormous risk in confronting this situation in the manner that they have," said Mehrdad Khonsari, a consultant to the London-based Center for Arab and Iranian Studies.

"Now they'll have to hold their ground and hope that people don't keep coming back. But history has taught us that people in these situations lose their initial sense of fear and become emboldened by brutality," he said.

Mousavi and the two other candidates who ran against Ahmadinejad had been invited to meet with Iran's Guardian Council, an unelected body of 12 clerics and Islamic law experts close to Khamenei that oversees elections. Its spokesman told state TV that Mousavi and the reformist candidate Mahdi Karroubi did not attend.

The council has said it was prepared to conduct a limited recount of ballots at sites where candidates claim irregularities but Mousavi's supporters did not withdraw his demands for a new election.

Both houses of the U.S. Congress approved a resolution on Friday condemning "the ongoing violence" by the Iranian government and its suppression of the Internet and cell phones.

The government has blocked Web sites such as BBC Farsi, Facebook, Twitter and several pro-Mousavi sites that are conduits for Iranians to tell the world about protests and violence.

Text messaging has not been working normally for many days, and cell phone service in Tehran is frequently down.

In an interview taped Friday with CBS, Obama said he is very concerned by the "tenor and tone" of Khamenei's comments. He also said that how Iran's leaders "approach and deal with people who are, through peaceful means, trying to be heard" will signal "what Iran is and is not."

A spokesman for Mousavi said Friday the opposition leader was not under arrest but was not allowed to speak to journalists or stand at a microphone at rallies. Iranian filmmaker Mohsen Makhmalbaf told the AP from Paris it was even becoming difficult to reach people close to Mousavi. He said he had not heard from Mousavi's camp since Khamenei's address
 
Also
 
Jun 20 10:48 AM US/Eastern
By ALI AKBAR DAREINI and NASSER KARIMI
Associated Press Writers

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Police beat protesters and fired tear gas and water cannons at thousands who rallied Saturday in open defiance of Iran's clerical government, sharply escalating the most serious internal conflict since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Eyewitnesses described fierce clashes near Revolution Square in central Tehran after some 3,000 protesters, many wearing black, chanted "Death to the dictator!" and "Death to dictatorship!" Police fired tear gas, water cannons and guns but it was not immediately clear if they were firing live ammunition.

English-language state TV confirmed that police had used batons and other non-lethal weapons against what it called unauthorized demonstrations.

The witnesses told The Associated Press that between 50 and 60 protesters were seriously beaten by police and pro-government militia and taken to Imam Khomeini hospital in central Tehran. People could be seen dragging away comrades bloodied by baton strikes.

Some protesters appeared to be fighting back, setting fire to militia members' motorcycles in streets near Freedom Square, witnesses said.

Helicopters hovered over central Tehran. Ambulance sirens echoed through the streets and black smoke rose over the city.

Tehran University was cordoned off by police and militia while students inside the university chanted "death to the dictator!" witnesses said. Police and militia barred people from entering Freedom Street, which runs from Freedom Square to Revolution Square, to prevent a massive gathering, the witnesses said.

Amateur video showed dozens of Iranians running down a street after police fired tear gas at them. Shouts of "Allahu Akbar!"—"God is Great"—could be heard on the video, which could not be independently verified.

The English-language state channel said a blast at the Tehran shrine of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini had killed one person and wounded two but the report could not be independently confirmed due to government restrictions on independent reporting. The shrine is about 12 miles (20 kilometers) south of central Tehran.

Hundreds of thousands of supporters of reformist presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi took to the streets for four consecutive days this week demanding the government cancel and rerun June 12 elections that ended with a declaration of overwhelming victory for hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Mousavi says he won and Ahmadinejad stole the election through widespread fraud.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei sided firmly with Ahmadinejad on Friday, saying the vote reflected popular will and ordering opposition leaders to end street protests or be held responsible for any "bloodshed and chaos" to come.

The statement effectively closed the door to Mousavi's demand for a new election, ratcheting up the possibility of a violent confrontation.

Police had clashed with protesters around Tehran immediately after the vote, and gunfire from a militia compound left at least seven dead, but the full force of the state remained in check until Saturday.

Web sites run by Mousavi supporters had said he planned to post a message, but there was no statement by the time of the planned street protests at 4 p.m. (7:30 a.m. EDT, 1130 GMT). Some pro-reform Web sites called for people to take to the streets.

Witnesses said protesters wore black as a symbol of mourning for the dead and the allegedly stolen election, with wristbands in green, the emblem of Mousavi's "Green Wave" movement.

Tehran Province Police Chief Ahmad Reza Radan said that police would "crack down on any gathering or protest rally which are being planned by some people." The head of the State Security Council also reiterated the warning to Mousavi that he would be held responsible if he encouraged street protests.

Eyewitnesses said thousands of police and plainclothes militia members filled the streets to prevent rallies. Fire trucks took up positions in Revolution Square and riot police surrounded Tehran University, the site of recent clashes between protesters and security forces, one witness said.

All witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity because they feared government reprisals for speaking with the press. Iranian authorities have placed strict limits on the ability of foreign media to cover recent events, banning reporting from the street and allowing only phone interviews and information from officials sources such as state TV.

The government has blocked Web sites such as BBC Farsi, Facebook, Twitter and several pro-Mousavi sites that are conduits for Iranians to tell the world about protests and violence.

Text messaging has not been working in Iran since last week, and cell phone service in Tehran is frequently down.

Mousavi and the two other candidates who ran against Ahmadinejad had been invited to meet with Iran's Guardian Council, an unelected body of 12 clerics and Islamic law experts close to Khamenei that oversees elections. Its spokesman told state TV that Mousavi and the reformist candidate Mahdi Karroubi did not attend.

The council has said it was prepared to conduct a limited recount of ballots at sites where candidates claim irregularities but Mousavi's supporters did not withdraw his demands for a new election.

A spokesman for Mousavi said Friday the opposition leader was not under arrest but was not allowed to speak to journalists or stand at a microphone at rallies. Iranian filmmaker Mohsen Makhmalbaf told the AP from Paris it's even becoming difficult to reach people close to Mousavi. He said he has not heard from Mousavi's camp since Khamenei's address.

Both houses of the U.S. Congress approved a resolution on Friday condemning "the ongoing violence" by the Iranian government and its suppression of the Internet and cell phones.

In an interview taped Friday with CBS, Obama said he is very concerned by the "tenor and tone" of Khamenei's comments. He also said that how Iran's leaders "approach and deal with people who are, through peaceful means, trying to be heard" will signal "what Iran is and is not."
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Iranian police have used water cannon, batons and tear gas to disperse protests over the presidential election, witnesses in Tehran say.

Police earlier warned protesters not to gather, but several thousand made their way to the central rally site.

A BBC correspondent at Enghelab Square said there was a huge security operation, including military police, anti-riot police and Basij militia.

There were also reports of a bombing at the shrine of Ayatollah Khomeini.

Two Iranian news agencies reported that the suicide bomber died and two people were injured in the bombing near the shrine of Ayatollah Khomeini, leader of the 1979 revolution.

There was no evidence to support the report, the BBC's Jon Leyne says from Tehran.

The country's supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei had warned protesters a day earlier not to continue their rallies, but correspondents say the warning appears to have made some protesters more determined.

It was unclear if political leaders had backed their supporters continuing to march.

Other developments included:

    * People using the micro-blogging site Twitter said smoke lay over Enghelab Square, and protesters were throwing stones
    * One witness told AFP news agency that he saw police beating people trying to reach the rally site
    * About 3,000 protesters were reportedly gathered at Enghelab Square, according to Associated Press news agency. They chanted "Death to the dictator" and "Death to dictatorship"
    * Witnesses told AP that up to 60 people were seriously beaten by police, with some being dragged away by fellow protesters
    * There were between 1,000-2,000 protesters in front of Tehran University, near Enghelab Square, AFP quoted witnesses as saying
    * The campus was cordoned off by riot police, AP reported
    * Helicopters and sirens could be heard over central Tehran, and black smoke seen, AP reported

These reports could not be independently confirmed, and foreign news organisations - including the BBC - have been subjected to strict controls which prevent reporters from leaving their offices.

The BBC's Jon Leyne, who is also in Tehran, says the impression was that the police had broken up very large crowds into smaller groups to prevent them assembling.

Confusing signals

Early on Saturday, the wife of defeated candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi and an aide to another rival candidate, Mehdi Karroubi, said the rally would go ahead.

But later reports said first that Mr Mousavi would be making a statement - which still has not been delievered - and then an aide to Mr Karroubi said his party had cancelled the protest.

See map of central Tehran

Speaking on state TV, deputy police chief Ahmad Reza Radan warned police would "certainly fight against any form of illegal gathering and protest". He also said protest organisers would be arrested.

Recount offer

Official results of the 12 June presidential poll gave President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad a resounding 63% of votes, compared to 34% for his nearest rival, Mr Mousavi.

The result triggered almost daily street protests - a challenge to ruling authorities unprecedented since the Islamic revolution of 1979.

Mr Mousavi had been expected, along with fellow challengers Mr Karroubi and Mohsen Rezai, to discuss more than 600 objections they had filed complaining about the poll at a meeting of the Guardian Council, which certifies elections, on Saturday.

But neither Mr Mousavi nor Mr Karroubi attended the meeting - which suggests, our correspondent says, they have abandoned their legal challenge to the election results.

State TV quoted the Guardian Council as saying it was "ready" to recount a randomly selected 10% of ballot boxes.

It had previously offered a partial recount of disputed ballots from the election, rather than the full re-run of the election demanded by protesters.



http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2009/06/iran_protestors_remind_mullahs.html

June 20, 2009
Iran protestors remind mullahs what happened to Saddam
Clarice Feldman

It turns out that the example of a tyrant overthrown and executed next door weighs on the minds of protestors in Tehran, and maybe on the mullahs' minds too. Gateway Pundit reports:

Quote
    Happened to Saddam"
    It looks like the situation in Iraq is playing a part in this revolution...

    Iranian democracy protesters on Thursday carried signs warning the evil regime, "Do not forget what happened to Saddam Hussein!"

   
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10:40
shouts of Death to khamene'i & Death to Dictator in holy city of Mashhad,Tehran,Isfahan,Ahwaz,Kermanshah,Shiraz ... "explosive" -- loudest it has ever been
10:48
People reportedly push back militia in Gisha
11:00
Many people Wounded At Haft Hooz SQ, No Clinic Is Open!
Revolutionary Road
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http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/World-News/Iran-Elections-Cops-Clash-With-Thousands-Of-Protesters-In-Tehran-Witnesses-Say/Article/200906315312956?f=rss


Breaking News

4:01pm UK, Saturday June 20, 2009
Supporters of defeated election candidate Mirhossein Mousavi have reportedly lit a fire at the headquarters of the Iranian president's backers in Tehran.


Riot police in Tehran (Pic: Twitter user Madyar)

Police have fired shots in the air to prevent clashes between those who favour pro-reformer Mr Mousavi and those who support hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, witnesses say.

Mr Ahmadinejad was the named the winner in the June 12 vote, but opposition candidates claimed there had been vote rigging and this led to major protests.

In the latest rally, officers have apparently been using tear gas and water cannon on opposition protesters.

Reports said thousands of people have defied Government warnings that any protests would be suppressed.

The head of the police warned Mr Mousavi of "firm action" against any "illegal" demonstration.

Eyewitnesses say some 3,000 protesters chanted "Death to the dictator!" and "Death to dictatorship!" near Revolution Square in the city centre.

Riot police were sent out on to the streets following a demand by Iran's supreme leader for the demonstrations to end.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei issued a strong warning on Friday to the leaders of the street protests that they would be responsible for any bloodshed.

snip
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Started by mystery-ak - Last post by mystery-ak
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/8110582.stm

Saturday, 20 June 2009 15:54 UK

Iranian police have used water cannon, batons and tear gas to disperse protests over the presidential election, witnesses in Tehran say.

Police earlier warned protesters not to gather, but several thousand made their way to the central rally site.

A BBC correspondent at Enghelab Square said there was a huge security operation, including military police, anti-riot police and Basij militia.

There were also reports of a bombing at the shrine of Ayatollah Khomeini.

Two Iranian news agencies reported that the suicide bomber died and two people were injured in the bombing near the shrine of Ayatollah Khomeini, leader of the 1979 revolution.

There was no evidence to support the report, the BBC's Jon Leyne says from Tehran.

The country's supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei had warned protesters a day earlier not to continue their rallies, but correspondents say the warning appears to have made some protesters more determined.

It was unclear if political leaders had backed their supporters continuing to march.

Other developments included:

    * People using the micro-blogging site Twitter said smoke lay over Enghelab Square, and protesters were throwing stones
    * One witness told AFP news agency that he saw police beating people trying to reach the rally site
    * About 3,000 protesters were reportedly gathered at Enghelab Square, according to Associated Press news agency. They chanted "Death to the dictator" and "Death to dictatorship"
    * Witnesses told AP that up to 60 people were seriously beaten by police, with some being dragged away by fellow protesters
    * There were between 1,000-2,000 protesters in front of Tehran University, near Enghelab Square, AFP quoted witnesses as saying
    * The campus was cordoned off by riot police, AP reported
    * Helicopters and sirens could be heard over central Tehran, and black smoke seen, AP reported

These reports could not be independently confirmed, and foreign news organisations - including the BBC - have been subjected to strict controls which prevent reporters from leaving their offices.

The BBC's Jon Leyne, who is also in Tehran, says the impression was that the police had broken up very large crowds into smaller groups to prevent them assembling.

Confusing signals

Early on Saturday, the wife of defeated candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi and an aide to another rival candidate, Mehdi Karroubi, said the rally would go ahead.

But later reports said first that Mr Mousavi would be making a statement - which still has not been delievered - and then an aide to Mr Karroubi said his party had cancelled the protest.

See map of central Tehran

Speaking on state TV, deputy police chief Ahmad Reza Radan warned police would "certainly fight against any form of illegal gathering and protest". He also said protest organisers would be arrested.

Recount offer

Official results of the 12 June presidential poll gave President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad a resounding 63% of votes, compared to 34% for his nearest rival, Mr Mousavi.

The result triggered almost daily street protests - a challenge to ruling authorities unprecedented since the Islamic revolution of 1979.

Mr Mousavi had been expected, along with fellow challengers Mr Karroubi and Mohsen Rezai, to discuss more than 600 objections they had filed complaining about the poll at a meeting of the Guardian Council, which certifies elections, on Saturday.

But neither Mr Mousavi nor Mr Karroubi attended the meeting - which suggests, our correspondent says, they have abandoned their legal challenge to the election results.

State TV quoted the Guardian Council as saying it was "ready" to recount a randomly selected 10% of ballot boxes.

It had previously offered a partial recount of disputed ballots from the election, rather than the full re-run of the election demanded by protesters.

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Suicide Bomber in Tehran?   [Jonah Goldberg]

A blast at a Khomeini shrine, according to Reuters:

    TEHRAN (Reuters) - A suicide bomber blew himself up near the shrine of Iran's revolutionary founder, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, in Tehran on Saturday, Iran's semi-official Mehr news agency reported.

    "A few minutes ago a suicide bomber blew himself up at the shrine," Mehr quoted a police official, Hossein Sajedinia, as saying.

    Two other people were wounded in the incident in the northern wing of the shrine, another news agency, Fars, said.

I think some skepticism is in order about who's behind this incident.
 
 
Chemical warfare in Iran?  Helicopters aren't using boiling water.



2.58 pm. good source: Hospital close to the scene in Tehran: 30-40 dead thus far as of 11pm and 200 injured. Police taking names of incoming injured.

Voice from Iran: Shame on a country in which foreign embassies are safer than hospitals

Gunfire Is Hearing From Near Resalat SQ. (East Teharan) 

Good site here, but warning:  Fairly graphic pictures

http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/
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http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-06-20/marked-for-death-by-twitter/?cid=hp:mainpromo3


Marked for Death by Twitter

by Eric Pape



Social networking sites are being celebrated as conduits for information out of Iran. But with the Supreme Leader vowing to punish dissidents, these digital footprints could prove deadly.

After a week in which masses of protestors endured brutal police beatings and daring attacks by club-wielding thugs on motorcycles, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei offered a little clarity. The lugubrious religious authority told throngs of supporters at his Friday Prayer at Tehran University that June 12 elections were free and fair, and that those who question them from the street question Iranian democracy itself.

To some extent the age of the camera phone, Twitter, Youtube and Facebook mean that protesters are now spying on themselves.

Khamenei, of course, sits above Iran’s electoral democracy, as the nation’s ultimate arbiter. Opposition leaders, he said, must stop the demonstrations or bear the blame for “bloodshed and chaos.” If someone were to summarize his lengthy speech on Twitter, it might go like this: Khamenei: ‘If protestors don’t back down, there will be a crackdown.’

Khamenei hasn’t simply endorsed President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad’s contested victory, he has essentially absolved the reinstated president—in advance—of blame for any violent repression to come. Like the recent protests, this new violence would no doubt result in dramatic video and photos on Youtube, Flickr and Facebook, and alarming “Tweets” and blog postings with links to those images. While Twitter isn’t a major revolutionary tool to organize protests in a place like Iran, the cryptic 140-character Tweets can be a pretty good means of making the outside world aware of events, especially when journalists are prevented from leaving their homes or offices.

But there is also inherent danger in all of this Web 2.0 information-sharing. In a crackdown, the video, photos, and blogs used to rally international support can help Iranian authorities identify protestors for arrest. Sophisticated Web users might know how to reduce this risk by adopting pseudonyms, masking the identity of their computers, and creating proxy servers that make information harder to trace to its source. (Some are even savvy enough to do the obvious: avoid posting photos and video, or giving names, that clearly identify individuals, especially if the video shows them clashing with authorities.)

But the truth is that many people are not taking such precautions--especially when confronted by more immediate concerns such as someone bearing down on them with clubs or guns, or a basij militia member aiming his motorcycle into a crowd. The cell phones the protestors are using to transmit text, photo, video and some Tweets are also easy to pinpoint geographically by the authorities who control the service. CNN reported this morning that some demonstrators were being told to remove the SIM cards in their phones to avoid being tracked.

This should be a concern, because the fact is that most revolutionary moments don’t succeed. And when they fail, authorities usually move to consolidate their power, methodically ferreting out dissenters and punishing them with jail sentences, exile, disappearance, or death. In the old days, authorities relied heavily on informers and spies—and they still do—but to some extent the age of the camera phone, Twitter, Youtube and Facebook mean that protesters are now spying on themselves.

It took awhile for Iranian authorities to fully comprehend the role of the Internet and cell phones in these protests. But in recent days people believed to be members of the Iranian security apparatus have set up apparent decoy websites about the demonstrations to gather IP addresses that will allow them to locate the computer of anyone tricked into clicking on them. Others—again believed to be government agents—have begun what appears to be an active campaign to mis- and dis-inform through Twitter postings. (Twitspam actually offers a list of apparent Twit-spy offenders.)

Moreover, the internet is largely a trail of past actions by users, and the lively web debate that preceded this election is a rich trove for anyone hunting opponents of the current regime. “We think of the Internet as a web…but you are going through shared pipes and that all leaves a trace,” explains Dan Sinker, who teaches on entrepreneurial journalism and the mobile web at Columbia College Chicago. The “pipes” in Iran, of course, are controlled almost exclusively by the state, which can tighten the spigot to a trickle, attempt to monitor all that goes through them, or just track down a select few troublemakers.

The Iranian authorities temporarily blocked access to Facebook for several days in late May, perhaps unaware that even the president had a Facebook fan page with nearly 30,000 fans. Now state security forces may decide that the unprecedented and remarkably civil discussions between members of the Iranian Diaspora and those in the homeland in the run-up to this election are a good place to dust for digital fingerprints, seeking traces of those who have written passionately against the regime. Few people are as anonymous on the Internet as they might think, especially under an authoritarian government.

Ominously, Khamenei injected a divisive note of class conflict into his speech in support of Ahmadinejad, portraying him as the legitimate choice of Iran’s masses. "If the political elite want to ignore and break the law, and take wrong measures which are harmful willy nilly, they will be held accountable for all the violence and blood and rioting." And certainly the “elite” is more likely to Twitter and blog. But with about 20 million Iranians now having access to the Internet, the opposition’s hope is that the elite and the masses are now one and the same—and that they are too numerous to target in an Internet inquisition.
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http://hotair.com/archives/2009/06/20/mousavi-threatened-into-silence-guardian/

Mousavi threatened into silence: Guardian
posted at 11:00 am on June 20, 2009 by Ed Morrissey

If Mirhossein Mousavi hasn’t said much publicly for the last 24 hours, either to cancel or endorse public protests, the Guardian says they know the reason.  Mohsen Makhmalbaf claims that he has to speak for Mousavi — and Iran — after the Revolutionary Guard wrecked Mousavi’s offices and threatened him into silence.  Makhmalbaf writes that the movement has gone beyond the sham election, and that Iranians will not return to oppression, at least not quietly:
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Iran riots: latest clip of post election riots - Basij shooting a young boy!
 
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http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D98UINCO2&show_article=1&catnum=0

Jun 20 02:34 PM US/Eastern
   

      WASHINGTON (AP) - Obama calls on Iranian government to stop `all violent and unjust actions' against Iranians


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