Iran Cracks Down On Dissidents
Opposition Voices Jailed, Web Sites Blocked As Election Protests Continue
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Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has told Mir Hossein Mousavi to pursue his demands through the electoral system and called for Iranians to unite behind their Islamic government. (AP/Iranian Student News Agency)
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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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Who's Who Iran's Election: Key Players A look at the most important figures in Iran's contested presidential election.
The U.S.-based International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran said that several dozen noted figures associated with the reform movement have been arrested, among them politicians, intellectuals, activists and journalists.
Tehran-based analyst Saeed Leilaz, who is often quoted by Western media, was arrested Wednesday by plainclothes security officers who came to his home, said his wife, Sepehrnaz Panahi.
At least 10 Iranian journalists have been arrested since the election, Reporters Without Borders said.
Click here for the latest updates on Iran.
A Web site run by former Vice President Mohammad Ali Abtahi said the reformist had been arrested.
Prominent reformer Saeed Hajjarian has also been detained, Hajjarian's wife, Vajiheh Masousi, told The Associated Press. Hajjarian is a close aide to former President Mohammad Khatami.
Meanwhile, Iranian opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi issued a direct challenge Wednesday to the country's supreme leader and cleric-led system, calling for a mass rally to protest disputed election results and violence against his followers.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has told Mousavi to pursue his demands through the electoral system and called for Iranians to unite behind their Islamic government, an extraordinary appeal in response to tensions over the presidential vote. But Mousavi appears unwilling to back down, issuing on his Web site a call for a mass demonstration Thursday.
"We want a peaceful rally to protest the unhealthy trend of the election and realize our goal of annulling the results," Mousavi said.
Mousavi and his supporters accuse the government of rigging the June 12 election to declare hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad the overwhelming winner. Their street protests, paired with dissent from powerful clerical and political figures, have presented one of the gravest threats to Iran's complex blend of democracy and religious authority since the system emerged from the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
The violence has left at least seven people dead, according to Iran's state media, although videos and photos posted by people inside Iran show scenes of violence that have not been reported through official channels. The new media restrictions make it virtually impossible to independently verify much of the information, which includes dramatic images of street clashes and wounded demonstrators.
Much of the imagery has been posted anonymously. In other cases, those who have posted have declined to be identified due to fear of government retaliation, or cannot be reached due to government restrictions on the Internet and mobile phones.
The Revolutionary Guard, an elite military force answering to Khamenei, said through the state news service that its investigators have taken action against "deviant news sites" that encouraged public disturbance and street riots. The Guard is a separate military with enormous domestic influence and control of Iran's most important defense programs. It is one of the key sources of power for the ruling establishment.
The statement alleged that dissident Web sites were backed by Canadian, U.S. and British interests, a frequent charge levied by Iranian hard-liners against their opposition.
"Legal action will be very strong and call on them to remove such materials," it said.
Election tensions appeared to be spreading further into the Iranian political and religious classes.
The semiofficial ISNA news agency and the private ILNA news agency reported that scuffles broke out between two legislators - one a reformist and the other a hard-liner - in an open session of parliament after they argued about the vote results.
The agencies said hard-liner Ruhollah Jani Abbaspour attacked reformer Amir Taherkhani after a parliamentary committee probing the protests met Mousavi and the speaker of parliament gave a report on the probe.
Iran's most senior dissident cleric, Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, said widespread vote fraud had undermined the legitimacy of the ruling Islamic system and that "no sound mind" would accept the results.
"A government that is based on intervening in (people's) vote has no political or religious legitimacy," said Montazeri, who had once been set to succeed Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini as supreme leader until he was ousted because of criticisms of the revolution.
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is an extremist whackjob as is Iran's President.
Islamic rule does not work and is lopsided.
The newer Iranian generation needs to start a jihad of their own. - Reply to this comment
- All be cause God wills it.
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- by impeachbhb June 17, 2009 7:30 AM PDT
These people are fighting for freedom and democracy. Our Apologist and Wimp in Chief does not want to meddle. Aren't we lucky to have elected such a brave leader?
We are being 'bashed' by Ahmadamnutjob and his supporters here in the USA and we have stayed out of it, can you imagine what would be said if we actually 'did something'????? - Reply to this comment
- Are you suggesting that the US go (by force) into every country where there is a contested election or where we feel the citizenry is not free? Or maybe we should ship arms to the opposition (oh wait we tried that in the 80s in Afganistan and that worked out so well)
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- The best thing to come from this is besides getting rid of the current president is to replace Khomeini with Montazeri.
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- The new CBS blog format seems a stale and truncated version of the previous one. Perhaps that's the general idea.
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- These people are fighting for freedom and democracy. Our Apologist and Wimp in Chief does not want to meddle. Aren't we lucky to have elected such a brave leader?
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Oh yeah. We need to do it the Bush way: Go in with guns a-blazin', and try to steal their oil. What makes some people think they have the right to force others to bow to their demands/ What makes Republicans think we should intervene in someone else's country, because some people are 'fighting for freedom' allegedly? Obama is doing the same hting that Nixon and other REPUBLICAN presidents did before him. We need to monitor this situation, see how it turns out, then see if there is anything we can or should do. To meddle in Iranian affairs is what got the initial Ayatollah placed in power, remember? Apparently not... - Reply to this comment
- These people are fighting for freedom and democracy. Our Apologist and Wimp in Chief does not want to meddle. Aren't we lucky to have elected such a brave leader?
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- He shouldn't meddle you mental midget. THINK about it. What would it look like if the POTUS sided strongly with their opposition. Their supreme leader would simple declare the opposition puppets of he US and squash it utterly. Obama is doing the right thing...he's thinking.
- It's really rough on Religious Extremist who PRETEND to be for open and honest elections... regardless of nation. Now these Religious Leaders can do is either start KILLING their loyal followers OR allow real open discussion. They should take a page from the Religious Extremist in THIS Nation from our past... that page would tell them that you can suppress but you can NOT kill the will of people to be free. Our Religious Right kept the entire southern part of this nation under a blanket of oppression for decades and decades, using bigotry and hate as tools to separate and control people on Religious Grounds... did them NO good and it will do these people no good.
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Ex-NBA ref Tim Donaghy 



