Ayatollah Seeks Unity Amid Tehran Protests
Iran's Supreme Leader Meets With Envoys Of Presidential Candidates As Two Factions Stage Dueling Rallies
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Play CBS Video Video Chaos In Iran Protests have turned deadly over the recent presidential election in Iran. CBS News' Elizabeth Palmer reports from Tehran.
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Video Seven Killed In Iranian Election Protests As protests to the Iranian elections continue, officials are offering to recount a select number of ballots in an attempt to ease the tension. Patrick Clawson, Deputy Director for Research at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, weighs in.
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Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei met with envoys from Iran's four presidential candidates and called for national unity, June 16, 2009. (AP Photo/Mehr News Agency)
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In this image issued by the government run Iranian Students News Agency, thousands of people attend a state-organized rally in a square in central Tehran, Iran, June 16, 2009. (AP Photo/ISNA, Saman Aghvami)
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In this image issued by the government run Iranian Students News Agency, thousands of people attend a state-organized rally in a square in central Tehran, Iran, June 16, 2009. (AP Photo/ISNA, Saman Aghvami)
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A wounded man lies at the street during a demonstration in front of a pro-government militia base near a rally supporting leading opposition presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi in Tehran, Iran, June 15, 2009. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)
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"I am ready to pay any price to materialize the ideals of you dear people," Mir Hossein Mousavi said, speaking though a portable loudspeaker. (CBS)
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Photo Essay Iran Election Sparks Riots Reform candidate supporters charge fraud in the landslide victory of President Ahmadinejad.
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Photo Essay Iran Elections Iranians begin voting on whether to keep Ahmadinejad in power for four more years.
As thousands of protesters gathered in Tehran Tuesday for the second straight day of large demonstrations against Iran's presidential elections, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called for national unity.
Khamenei called for Iranians to unite behind the cleric-led ruling system despite rival demonstrations and street clashes between supporters of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his reformist opponent Mir Hossein Mousavi, who says Ahmadinejad stole re-election.
There's a lot of political maneuvering going on to contain the unrest, and one sign of that is the arrest of at least 100 prominent opposition members - including some senior members of the clergy, reports CBS News correspondent Elizabeth Palmer from Tehran.
Khamenei also said representatives of all four candidates should be present for any limited recount of disputed ballots, which the country's cleric-led Guardian Council said Tuesday that it would be willing to conduct.
"In the elections, voters had different tendencies, but they equally believe in the ruling system and support the Islamic Republic," said Khamenei, who is Iran's ultimate authority.
The powerful Guardian Council agreed to a partial recount of the ballots in what they called contested areas. They also said they'd look into reports of people using false IDs to vote, Palmer reports.
But Mehdi Karoubi - another opposition candidate who came third on the ballot - said that's not good enough.
"A really thorough investigation would conclude that the vote is invalid. Otherwise this government will be illegitimate," he told Palmer.
A spokesman for the Guardian Council, Abbas Ali Kadkhodaei, was quoted on state TV as saying the recount would be limited to voting sites where candidates claim irregularities took place. He did not rule out the possibility of canceling the results, saying that is within the council's powers, although nullifying an election would be an unprecedented step.
But some observers are still skeptical of the Council's intentions.
"It's a little difficult to imagine that they're going to do a good job, because the Council of Guardians is the organization that basically disqualifies anybody they don't like from the election," Gary Sick, a former White House advisor on Iran told CBS News. "They have a history of taking a partisan position, so it's difficult to see them doing a serious investigation."
Sick pointed out, however, that given the furor generated by these election results and the fierce opposition from within the country, "It may be harder to run a cover-up than it had appeared on the surface."
More likely, the dramatic intervention by Khamenei and the Guardian Council could buy time in hopes of reducing the anti-Ahmadinejad anger. The prospect of spiraling protests and clashes is the ultimate nightmare for the Islamic establishment.
Today, it was the turn of President Ahmadinejad's supporters to fill Tehran's Freedom Square - exactly where thousands of opposition supporters gathered yesterday. These vast rallies and counter-rallies are the public face of the huge power struggle taking place behind the scenes, Palmer reports.
Today's opposition rally was cancelled after the defeated candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi warned his supporters to stay off the streets for their own protection. But guided by Twitter, young people streamed to an informal meeting place anyway, Palmer reports.
"This repressive regime cannot continue like this," one young Mousavi supporter told Palmer by phone.
A witness tells The Associated Press that the pro-Mousavi rally stretched more than a mile along Vali Asr avenue, from Vanak Square to the headquarters of Iranian state TV.
Security forces did not interfere, the witness said, and the protest lasted from about 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Other witnesses told the AP that about 100 people were still protesting in front of state TV around 9:45 p.m.
A correspondent for state-controlled Press TV correspondent said the crowd carried banners of Mousavi, wore green headbands and covered their mouths in an apparent defense against tear gas.
The government barred foreign media from covering rallies in Tehran - even the state-organized demonstration, where government officials urged the crowd not to let the election divide the nation and said the unrest would not threaten Iran's Islamic system. That rally drew thousands of people waving flags and pictures of Iran's supreme leader in an apparent attempt to reclaim the streets for the government.
The Press TV correspondent at the pro-reform rally told the anchor by telephone that a crowd she called "huge" and "massive" was carrying banners of Mousavi, wearing green headbands and covering their mouths in an apparent defense against tear gas. She said the crowd was marching farther north, toward Tajrish Square.
The clerical government appears to be trying to defuse popular anger and quash unrest by announcing the limited recount even as it cracks down on foreign media and shows its strength by calling supporters to the streets.
"This nation will protect and defend its revolution in any way," Gholam Ali Haddad Adel, a prominent lawmaker and supporter of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, said as the crowd in Vali Asr Square pumped their fists in the air and cheered in support, images on state-run television showed.
Iranian state media said the government organized the rally to demand punishment for those who protested violently after a larger demonstration Monday by hundreds of thousands of Mousavi supporters. Mousavi has said he won Friday's balloting and has demanded the government annul Ahmadinejad's victory and conduct a new election.
Iran's state radio said seven people were killed in clashes from Monday's protest - the first official confirmation of deaths linked to the street battles following the disputed election.
Witnesses saw people firing from the roof of a building used by a state-backed militia after some Mousavi supporters set fire to the building and tried to storm it.
Mousavi supporters had called for demonstrations Tuesday but Mousavi said in a message in his Web site he would not be attending any rally and asked his supporters to "not fall in the trap of street riots" and "exercise self-restraint."
Ahmadinejad traveled to Russia Tuesday after delaying a trip for a day but did not mention the Iranian election or unrest. Instead, he focused on the traditional target of the Islamic Republic's ire, the United States.
"America is enveloped in economic and political crises, and there is no hope for their resolution," he said through an interpreter. "Allies of the United States are not capable of easing these crises."
In Washington, U.S. President Barack Obama said that he believes the ayatollah's decision to order an investigation "indicates he understands the Iranian people have deep concerns."
He also expressed hope that the Iran's internal political friction could bring about change in the country.
"I do believe that something has happened in Iran," with Iranians more willing to question the government's "antagonistic postures" toward the world, Mr. Obama said.
But at the same time, Mr. Obama said it would not be helpful if the United States was seen by the world as "meddling" in the issue.
Foreign reporters in Iran to cover last week's elections began leaving the country Tuesday after Iranian officials said they would not extend their visas.
Authorities restricted other journalists, including Iranians working for foreign media from reporting on the streets, and said they could only work from their offices, conducting telephone interviews and monitoring official sources such as state TV.
At least 10 Iranian journalists have been arrested since the election, "and we are very worried about them, we don't know where they have been detained," Jean-Francois Julliard, secretary general of Reporters Without Borders told AP Television News in Paris. He added that some people who took pictures with cell phones also were arrested.
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- Separation of church and state in Iran would help them, I think.
- Reply to this comment
- This new CBS format sucks. The "Reply to Comment" feature fragments the flow of the discussion. They should also sort so that the most recent comments are at the top.
Maybe if we tell it sucks with every other comment they'll change it back.
How bout the 30 second ads before every video!!!!??? wITH NO "sKIP THIS aD" OPTION! - Reply to this comment
- ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww...
ABC's site just got a new look,
it went from bad to horrible..... - Reply to this comment
- the new site is a Plagiarised scaled down version of ABC's site
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- Separation of Church and State
Separation of Mosque and State
Separation of Synagogue and State.
We need a Global agenda, this century it can be achieved.
Education is the key - Reply to this comment
- by glenaw-2009 June 16, 2009 8:57 PM PDT
Does anyone else hate the new site?
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I do, its unwieldy, favors glitz, glam and marketing over news and substance. Typical of the Marketing Major/Business Major infestation. It doesn't have to do anything as long as it looks pretty. - Reply to this comment
- Why can't they all play nice together? In my house you play nice or go home!
- Reply to this comment
- Does anyone else hate the new site?
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- "A really thorough investigation would conclude that the vote is invalid. Otherwise this government will be illegitimate," he told Palmer.
This has got to be the most pathetic and ignorant attempt to hijack an election in modern history. None of these challengers -- this guy garnering less than 5% of the "fraudulent" vote -- really wants any kind of serious investigation, unless it's a "thorough" investigation that concludes nothing other than the entire election is invalid.
These are like third-graders watching Republican politics of extortion and obstinance and believing it to be a legitimate tool in a healthy democracy that can simply dupe a majority into giving up democracy while lying about it. - Reply to this comment
- rhs648-Does it really matter which candidate in Iran won?
Of course it matters. Mousavi wants change in that country. If he wins the people there will be better off. Ahmadinejad is an oppressor, a tyrant and a killer. - Reply to this comment
- Ayatollah in Arabic means "Sign of God". You see the arrogance in these islamic thugs?! "SIGN OF GOD" !..But make no mistake. This label isn't there for philosophical interpretations. What it really means is that "You mess with me, you're messing with God"...and then, they arrest you and etc.
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- This is the actual record of the real election defected by 3 employees who are under arrest and their lives are in danger. 84% of Iranians votes AGAINST Ahmadinejad.
Total Eligible Voters : 49,322,412
Actual Voters in Election: 42,026,078
Mousavi: 19,075,623 = 45.39%
Karroubi: 13,387,104 = 31.85%
Ahmadinejad: 5,698,417 = 13.56%
Razaee: 3,754,218 = 8.93 % - Reply to this comment
- The Iranian people must unite against their common enemy: Israel. That's right. They need to go after the people who get $450,000 per man, woman and child in US defense money. The amount spent on defending the US is equivalent to $1300 per man, woman and child, which results in Maria the motel maid being free to walk across the border at will, along with anyone else who wants to cross our leaky borders.
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- One would think that the "Conservatives" in the USA would have great admiration for the Iranian style of governement:
a country lead by religious leaders with suppression of "liberal" dissent. - Reply to this comment
- There's their problem.... they GOTTA get rid of those grey-bearded old BILLYGOATS they call religious leaders!
Some of these clerics are probaby good people who are wise and educated. Is it fair to assume that all of these religious leaders are evil or without mercy? There are probaby some wonderful and hard working clerics who are revered by their followers as well as some who are too extreme. - Reply to this comment
- It is all about perception and pacification. If the people have the perception that the Clerics are going to do a recount, they will be pacified. If the Clerics extend the perception that the people have a form of democracy with a vote for a figurehead leader, they will be pacified. There is no true democracy in Iran, there is only the perception of one to pacify the people.
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- Unless the people are willing to drive this to it's logical conclusion there will be retaliation by the Iranian government and many thousands will disappear into prisons or mass graves.
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- The US needs to side on the sidelines and not get involved.
If the US gets involved (like McCain wants) then the Iranians will be united against the US and the election issue will be sidelined.
Let the Iranian people work this out, it is none of our business - period. - Reply to this comment
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- McBush he and Cheney should just shut up, he thinks he has the answers he and Bush worked together, and look what we got a durn mess.You have the right idea zonkiller Let the Iranian people work this out ,it is none of our business,I wish the republicans would learn we are not the watchdog of the world other countries as long as they abide by human law have rights if the government can't abide by that the people will get rid of them. We have troops on both sides of Iran and in the north of Iran and in Kuwait so we will be ready we have to protect them.As usual republicans don't care about our troops
- The US needs to side on the sidelines and not get involved.
If the US gets involved (like McCain wants) then the Iranians will be united against the US and the election issue will be sidelined.
Let the Iranian people work this out, it is none of our business - period. - Reply to this comment
- Hard to have unity when the government is backing the loser and calling him the winner. Isn't there something in the Koran that says scamming your old people is wrong and dishonest?
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