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Khamenei Defends Election, Warns Protesters
19.06.2009 09:57
In his first nationwide address following days of opposition protests, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has ruled out any vote-rigging in the country's disputed presidential election.
Khamenei said the June 12 vote had produced a "definitive victory" for incumbent President Mahmud Ahmadinejad and that street protests should end.
It could prove to be a key moment in Iran's postelection turmoil.
Leading Friday prayers at Tehran University and publicly addressing the disputed outcome for the first time, the country's top religious and political authority said the election gave Ahmadinejad a landslide win that is not in doubt.
Khamenei this week encouraged moderate challenger Mir Hossein Musavi to pursue his objections to the vote process through legal channels.
"The system in our country does not allow for any election fraud," Khamenei said in his Friday sermon. "Anybody who is involved in election issues knows that for sure and approves of this."
He cited a gap of 11 million votes between Ahmadinejad and Musavi, the closest of three challengers according to official figures.
"Sometimes there's a difference of 100,000, or 500,000, or 1 million votes, then it is possible to say there could have been fraud," Khamenei said. "But a difference of 11 million votes -- how can there be any vote rigging?"
Khamenei's sermon was attended by Ahmadinejad and the conservative challenger, former Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps commander Mohsen Rezai.
Tens of thousands gathered in and around Tehran University to hear Khamenei -- their ranks swollen, reportedly, by government-organized buses bringing people to the venue.
The disputed result has brought hundreds of thousands of Musavi supporters onto the streets in the past week in the biggest protests in 30 years.
Authorities have rounded up scores of protesters and reformist figures, and at least seven people were shot dead in clashes with pro-regime militia on June 15.
The UN's human rights chief, Navi Pillay, added her voice to the chorus of international concern today, saying it was the government's responsibility to ensure law enforcement and militia did not resort to "illegal acts of violence."
Musavi wants the result annulled and a new vote held.
But Khamenei said the election was decided at the ballot box, not in the street.
"Struggling in the street after an election is not the right thing to do. But also, it challenges the principle of democracy and election," Khamenei said. "I ask everyone to stop this. This way is wrong. If they don't stop this, then they will bear the responsibility and the consequences of this chaos."
There were harsh words, too, for foreign powers who, Khamenei said, had interfered in Iranian internal affairs.
But he said they were mistaken if they thought pressure could bring about the kind of revolution in Iran that transformed some post-Soviet countries.
Khamenei singled out Britain for criticism, describing it as "treacherous."
In response, Britain called in the Iranian ambassador, and Prime Minister Gordon Brown later said: "I believe it's right for us to speak out for human rights, to speak out against repression, to speak out in condemnation of violence, to speak out where a free media is prevented from doing its job. And we will continue to do it. But we're not the only country who is speaking out. The whole of the world is speaking out."
Khamenei alsodescribed the election result and the high turnout as a show of people's trust in the Islamic system.
He also said his views were closer to those of Ahmadinejad than to the president's challengers.
No opposition rally is planned until June 20, the same day that Iran's election watchdog, the powerful Guardians Council has invited Ahmadinejad's three challengers to a meeting to discuss their complaints.
They number in the hundreds, and include Rezai's claim that official turnout in some areas was as high as 140 percent.
Source: http://www.rferl.org/content/Khamenei_Derides_Enemies_At_Friday_Prayers/1757893.html
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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