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Shots Fired Into Crowd As Musavi Supporters Rally
June 15, 2009
By Golnaz Esfandiari
Shots have been fired at demonstrators at a rally in Tehran where hundreds of thousands of Iranians were expressing outrage over the recent presidential election, with one eyewitness claiming that at least one person was dead and many others wounded.
The gunfire erupted after backers of reformist candidates Mir Hossein Musavi and Mehdi Karrubi marched from Revolution Square in the capital toward Azadi Square.
The demonstrators were unchallenged by regular security forces until they neared a compound set aside for a volunteer militia affiliated with Iran's powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).
The witness to the purported fatality, an AP photographer, said people in the crowd had attacked the building, which houses members of the Basij religious militia, who then opened fire.
With media access to the area strictly controlled by Iranian authorities, initial reports were unclear about the number of wounded.
"We were walking together -- my brother is 15 years old -- I was on my way from work when [I saw] there was unrest," the brother of one young man who was hit by gunfire told RFE/RL's Radio Farda by telephone. "The Basijis were there -- they fired shots and [my brother] was hit in his kidney."
Websites and text-messaging services have been cut off since polls opened early on June 12.
Mohsen Makhmalbaf, a well-known Iranian film director and a spokesman outside Iran for Musavi, told a protest rally in front of the Iranian Embassy in Paris that "communication is very hard with Iran."
"The BBC is being jammed, but voices are being aired from Radio Farda and [the Voice of America] -- talk to them," Makhmalbaf said. "Don't be like those who advise you not to talk to VOA. We don't have any other media, we don't have SMS (mobile phone text messaging) anymore. Whoever gives you air time talk to them, convey the people's message and voice. Don't let us be censored inside Iran and be silent outside."
He went on to say that Musavi "has two requests" of Iranians: "Ask governments not to recognize this [election], and ask the media to cover the events [in Iran]."
Reformist Outrage
Supporters of Musavi, Karrubi and their reformist allies had assembled in downtown Tehran to protest results of a June 12 presidential election that Musavi and others have said are fraudulent.
The gathering came soon after Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei -- who has the final word on political and religious affairs under Iran's constitution -- extended support to Musavi's request for the Guardians Council to review the vote count from the election.
Official results said voters favored incumbent hard-liner Mahmud Ahmadinejad by a wide margin.
Former Prime Minister Musavi, appearing before the public for the first time since the controversial vote, reportedly told the crowd of protesters that he is ready for a new election.
"The vote of the people is more important than Musavi or any other person," he reportedly told the rally, held under the watchful eye of riot police and security forces.
Wearing Musavi's green campaign color, his backers showed their support by clapping their hands, chanting Musavi's name, and shouting, "Give back our votes!"
Slogans were also directed against the incumbent who has claimed a landslide victory, President Ahmadinejad, and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
"Mahmud, We will kick you out. Mahmud commits treachery; the leader supports him," they chanted.
Khamenei Weighs In
Despite Ahmadinejad's assurances that the vote was "free and fair," Musavi's supporters believe the results were rigged. Musavi has described the vote as a "charade" and called for the annulment of the results.
Musavi has lodged a complaint with the Guardians Council, which has said that it will announce its decision in 10 days.
State news agency IRNA reported that Supreme Leader Khamenei met with Musavi on June 14 and told the presidential candidate that he had asked the Guardians Council to consider his concerns carefully. Iranian state television has reported that the supreme leader also told Musavi to pursue his complaints regarding the election by legal means.
"I have appealed to the Guardians Council but I'm not very optimistic about their judgment," Musavi's website quoted him as telling supporters at the Tehran rally on June 15. "Many of its members during the election were not impartial and supported the government candidate."
Speaking to RFE/RL's Radio Farda, one protester at the rally expressed the anger felt by Musavi supporters.
"We want our vote to count, they have ignored our vote, Iran’s leaders have to understand that we are here today so that Ahmadinejad and his band understand that they don't have [the right to do this]. People's votes should have a say in this country, and we know what we had written on the ballots."
Musavi had not made a public appearance since election night, when Ahmadinejad was declared the winner with 62 percent of the vote, enough to prevent a potential runoff vote. But he reportedly arrived by car at the rally to protest against what he has described as a "charade" and "wizardry."
Ahead of the gathering, Musavi's website reported that Mehdi Karrubi, the reformist who finished last among four candidates based on election results released by the Interior Ministry, was also to appear at the rally. Karrubi has also protested against the results and called the June 12 vote "illegitimate."
Disputed Vote
The past two days have been marked by violent protests in Tehran and a number of other cities over Ahmadinejad's disputed reelection.
Ahmadinejad has described the June 12 vote as the "people's election" and said it was "clean and healthy."
But Musavi has described the vote as a "charade" and called for the annulment of the results. Karrubi has also protested against the results and called the June 12 vote "illegitimate."
Musavi's and Karrubi's supporters believe there was massive fraud, with some describing the June 12 vote as a veritable "coup."
Radio Farda reported in the early hours of the rally that the protests were peaceful. Reuters news agency reported scuffles between groups of Musavi supporters and supporters of President Ahmadinejad.
In the past two days, more than 150 reformist figures, activists, and journalists have been arrested in Tehran and other cities. Observers are warning of an increasing repressive atmosphere in the capital and elsewhere.
In the early morning of June 15, security forces reportedly attacked a Tehran University dormitory and injured a number of students. Some are said to have been detained.
A similar incident reportedly took place at a university dorm in Isfahan.
The attack on the dorm in Tehran came following a crackdown on a protest at the university on the night of June 14, during which students protested against Ahmadinejad's reelection and chanted, "Death to the dictator!"
'Terrifying' Scenes
One student who witnessed the crackdown at Tehran University described the scenes as "terrifying."
"I still can't believe what I saw. [One of Ahmadinejad's supporters] was joyfully beating a student with force," the student says. "The man I saw was laughing and telling the student he was beating, 'I wish your mother could see you when you're being beaten up like this.' "
Later, security forces and plainclothes agents attacked the dorm, breaking down doors, shattering glass, and beating students. Witnesses said sticks and heavy chains were used in the attack.
There is concern that there could be more violence as Tehran embraces for a third day of protests.
On the night of June 14, some Tehran residents expressed their anger by shouting "Death to the dictator!" and "Allah Akbar" (God is great) from city rooftops.
Such violent and vocal protests have not been seen in Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
Radio Farda broadcaster Mohammad Zarghami contributed to this report
Copyright (c) 2009. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
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