TEHRAN, Iran, July 7, 2009

Ahmadinejad Declares "New Era" for Iran

President Tries to Move Past Turmoil over Disputed Elections, Says Contests were Fair

  • In this image issued by the semi-official Iranian Students News Agency, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad attends a ceremony of the judiciary in Tehran on Saturday, June, 27, 2009.

    In this image issued by the semi-official Iranian Students News Agency, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad attends a ceremony of the judiciary in Tehran on Saturday, June, 27, 2009.  (AP/Arash Khamushi, ISNA)

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(CBS/AP)  Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Tuesday sought to put the turmoil over the disputed presidential elections behind him and declared on national television that the contests were clean, fair and marked the start of a new era.

His speech came as the country's top three reformist leaders sought to rekindle their opposition movement, demanding that ruling clerics end the heavy "security atmosphere" imposed after the elections and free those detained in the unrest, according to an opposition Web site.

It was Ahmadinejad's first national speech since the supreme leader declared the election results valid despite outcry from the other candidates and weeks of street protests claiming that the results were fraudulent.

"This is a new beginning for Iran ... we have entered a new era," the president said, explaining that the 85 percent turnout and overwhelming win had given his government a new legitimacy.

"It was the most clean and free election in the world," he said, adding that during the re-count "no fault was discovered. The whole nation understood this." The supervisors were from the cultured and trustworthy faction of people, and the election "re-approved the 30 years old road" that the country has taken, Ahmadinejad said.

"This election has doubled the dignity of the Iranian nation," he said.

Ahmadinejad also said that the structure of the nation "needs to be altered from what is today," and that "government changes will be significant, resulting in higher levels of happiness and achievements."

"Some people say that 13 to 14 million have showed criticism," he stated. "Have not the other 24 million showed criticisms? Even I am amongst the critics. The pressures that were imposed on me were due to my criticism. Criticism cause’s improvement in a nation. We have to be unhappy with the current situation in order to achieve higher mountains. Thirteen million want change? I say 40 million want change, and I am one of them.

"In future I will speak more about the domestic problems but I would like to invite everyone to work and I suggest that the ones who see the capabilities in themselves in serving the nation to come forward and introduce themselves and I will directly evaluate and will choose them."

Ahmadinejad also had some criticism for foreign governments, such as the U.S. and U.K., who he has accused of meddling in Iranian affairs.

"These foreign interferers write the democracy laws themselves and then they judge it themselves, and they decide which nations posses democracy and which nations do not," he said. "They are the makers and judges at the same time. In the world economy we also witnessed that they take the profit for themselves and spread the inflation to the other nations. In our nuclear program we saw the same reaction. If we do not advance our world presence, we cannot build Iran. In this election the foreigners committed very bad deeds, and unfortunately some members of our nation also cooperated with them."

During the half hour speech, Iranians in many parts of the capital Tehran could be heard shouting from their rooftops, "death to the dictator" and "God is great" - actions that have become a symbol of defiance since the elections.

Opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, who claims to have won the June 12 election, is struggling for a way to channel the widespread discontent since the vote but which has since been shattered by the harsh crackdown by police, Revolutionary Guards and Basij militia.

Mousavi hinted on Monday that he may move away from the tactic of protests and create a political party to work in what he called "a legal framework." Late Monday, he met with the other top stars of the reform movement - former president Mohammad Khatami and Mahdi Karroubi, another election candidate - in a show of unity.

The three warned Iran's clerical leadership that if the security crackdown continues, it "will only lead to radicalization of political activities," Mousavi's Web site reported on Tuesday.

But it is not clear how much margin the opposition will have for political action. Many of the top reform figures - including Khatami's former vice president and one-time members of his Cabinet are in detention and could face charges of fomenting riots. Earlier this week, the head of the Revolutionary Guards warned that the elite force would take a major role in defending the country's system of clerical rule.

There was no sign of a let-up in the clampdown imposed since Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei declared the official election results valid and Ahmadinejad the victor.

Police say 20 people were killed in postelection violence and more than 1,000 arrested, though they say many have been released.

Authorities this week closed universities and dormitories, apparently because of Web site calls for new protests on Thursday, the anniversary of a 1999 attack by Basij and police on protesting students. It is unclear if anyone will attempt a march - not only because of the security measures but also because of heavy dust clouds and pollution hanging over the capital and other parts of the country the past two days, forcing the closure of government offices.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, meanwhile, demanded the release of a young French academic detained after taking photos of Iranian protests and accused of espionage.

Clotilde Reiss, 23, was arrested last week at Tehran's airport as she was about to leave Iran after a five-month stay during which she taught French at Isfahan University.

"These accusations of espionage are high fantasy," Sarkozy said at a news conference Tuesday.

Iran's hard-line leaders have been trying to erase any lingering doubts about the legitimacy of Ahmadinejad's government by portraying the unrest as sparked by foreign meddling.

In his speech Tuesday, the president criticized his election rivals and accused them of working with Iran's enemies.

"Unfortunately, some people inside Iran collaborated with them. They repeated the remarks made by certain Western countries," Ahmadinejad said, as he accused the West of interfering in the country's politics.

"The result of their childish acts of interference in Iran's internal affairs is that the Iranian nation and government will enter the global stage several times more powerful," he said.

Also Tuesday, six U.N. human rights experts issued a statement expressing "grave concern about reports of killings, ongoing arrests, use of excessive police force and the ill-treatment of detainees." They questioned the legality of the arrests of journalists and demonstrators, who could face "arbitrary detentions."

Despite the regime's rhetoric, a number of top clerics have continued to question the election - a rare defiance of the supreme leader from the ranks of the religious establishment.

This week, a party close to one of the most politically powerful clerics - former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani - issued a statement rejecting Ahmadinejad's victory. It was one of the strongest hints yet on the powerful cleric's stance. He is the head of two major clerical ruling bodies and is a bitter enemy of Ahmadinejad, but has kept his distance from the postelection turmoil.

"Due to the unhealthy trend of the election, widespread irregularities and the support extended by a majority of Guardian Council members to a specific candidate, the result of this election is not acceptable," the Kargozaran party said in its statement, published on Mousavi's Web site.



© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by ramos1129 July 8, 2009 4:39 AM EDT
The events in Iran have shown the world the illegimatecy of Ahmadinejad's administration. He is in for a world of hurt.
Reply to this comment
by skyk-2009 July 8, 2009 6:56 AM EDT
Yep and THAT has been the plan all along! Change MUST come from the People of that Nation and the President played it just right.
by searingtruth July 7, 2009 10:42 PM EDT
"Truth is defined by the weakest of us who must suffer through it."
SearingTruth

A Future of the Brave
Reply to this comment
by searingtruth July 7, 2009 10:35 PM EDT
"A tyrant's only ally is fear."
SearingTruth

A Future of the Brave
Reply to this comment
by curiously1 July 7, 2009 10:23 PM EDT
"New era"?!! What the ffffff...! This idiot thug, with his ugly suit, on his ugly body, with an ugly face, is a CLOWN at best. God, I hate this punk ! I hope the Israelis toast his butt with one giant U.S made missile !
Reply to this comment
by lexern July 7, 2009 10:07 PM EDT
Obama should be IMPEACHED if he engages the illegitimate regime in Iran. He needs to lead the free world by announcing that the US will not engage the illegitimate government in Iran under no circumstance. He needs to imbolden those that seek freedom in Iran. He needs to act now so we can see a free and democratic Iran. Don't forget the tyrants in control are rounding up thousands of people in the middle of the night, the country is a military state at this time. Phone, internet, television, newspapers, all communication sources shut down. This should be a historic moment in our lives, where is the leader of the free world when the world needs him.
Reply to this comment
by skyk-2009 July 8, 2009 6:55 AM EDT
What would you suggest? You poor losers haven't a clue and only exist to do what? Those in Iran ALREADY aspire to have their OWN Obama and have said so LOUDLY. Now even in your feeble fringe right mind doesn't that relate to encouraging those people? Honest I sit and listen to you few and wonder how a mind gets in such a condition... how the simple lack of the ability to THINK escapes you?
by jwesel1 July 8, 2009 9:52 AM EDT
US has been engaging the illegitimate state of Israel from day 1 and no one impeached any president for that.
by YuSoWrong July 8, 2009 10:13 AM EDT
Republics are the only legitimate form of government. Israel is the only legitimate government in the Near East.
by tiredofthebs July 7, 2009 9:09 PM EDT
The Iranian Gov't. realizes what lies ahead. An inexperienced leader is NOT IN THEIR BEST INTEREST at this time. War with Iraq is imminent for the Iranians, and MOUSAVI is not ready.
Reply to this comment
by jwesel1 July 8, 2009 9:53 AM EDT
Iraq is the one that attacked Iran using US weapons. You had a bad teacher for your History 101.
by speakinup22 July 7, 2009 8:15 PM EDT
Mr Ahmadinejad will get his new era all right.

It will come in the form of a bullet from one of his opposition's voters. And then the Ayatollah will be next, Allah willing of course.
Reply to this comment
by stn_sage July 7, 2009 11:48 PM EDT
Well, there's always that possibility! But, I betcha that neither one of them goes anywhere WITHOUT a phalanx of guards!

H*e*l*l! I bet neither one of them takes a p*e*e without a couple guards
on the door! No kidding!

Getting at them--- wouldn't be easy! But, on an "off day", who knows?

You're an optimist, on THIS matter!
by Resin-Smoker July 7, 2009 8:14 PM EDT
by YuSoWrong July 7, 2009 3:47 PM PDT
Iran's hope is in the oil assets it has looted from foreign investors. If the price of oil drops, or if alternative energy is produced, Iran will resemble the killing fields of Cambodia. Its dictatorship will execute millions of people to stay in control of a medieval fantasy.

Man, we can only hope things go so well...
Reply to this comment
by jwesel1 July 8, 2009 9:55 AM EDT
Those assets were given to Western oil companies by their puppet, the Shah of Iran who was brought in power after CIA removed the democratically elected government of Mussadiq
by YuSoWrong July 8, 2009 10:11 AM EDT
No. Those assets were explored, discovered, refined and exported by foreign investors, when Iran was a pathetic backwater of civilization. Those assets have been looted by every Iranian government since the 1950s. Those assets pay the salaries of the religious mystics who terrorize Iranian citizens today.
by jwesel1 July 7, 2009 6:39 PM EDT
He is Iran's hope in standing upto western bullies.
Reply to this comment
by YuSoWrong July 7, 2009 6:47 PM EDT
Iran's hope is in the oil assets it has looted from foreign investors. If the price of oil drops, or if alternative energy is produced, Iran will resemble the killing fields of Cambodia. Its dictatorship will execute millions of people to stay in control of a medieval fantasy.
by stn_sage July 7, 2009 11:25 PM EDT
He is the MULLAH's hope in standing up to the Western bullies!

The majority of the people of Iran don't dislike the West, but the old,
religious leadership does!
by stn_sage July 7, 2009 11:41 PM EDT
To YuSoWrong:

Mr. 'Ahmad' will do that (murder his people) no matter what, if it will keep him in power! You've only looked into the future a year or two down the road---maybe you're an oracle and didn't even know it?!
by John_Merritt July 7, 2009 5:41 PM EDT
So where is the 'new era'? It looks like the same picture but with a fresh coat of paint. If he means they will allow more dialogue with all parties within the regime, that may very well be. Until, they decide enough is enough and they stop that dialogue.

You don't change 5,000 years of history over one election. Please. I wish he and everyone else who desires change, 'say what you mean, and mean what you say'.

In other words, there is no substitute for transparency, because all you get is a cloud of confusion, uncertainty, deception and lies.
Reply to this comment
by stn_sage July 7, 2009 11:33 PM EDT
John, you're thinking in terms of REAL change! You know what this is really about!

A 'new era' alright! He stole the election, and now this 'new era' is going to include a huge movement to the right in the form of a 'police
state' dictatorship! Even more so, than already previously existed!

Don't expect most politicians to clearly 'say what they mean'--- that
will rarely happen anymore, especially the totalitarian dictator-types,
those guys thrive on 'doublespeak'!

No, I'm afraid it's just a new era of suppression and totalitarian control in Iran--- that's what he REALLY means!
by albert571 July 7, 2009 5:25 PM EDT
He and Obama have so much in common!!!They will be best buds in the comeing year,just watch!
Reply to this comment
by pete_in_az July 7, 2009 5:28 PM EDT
Your a ********.
by speakinup22 July 7, 2009 8:17 PM EDT
Pete,

I believe the correct contraction for you are would be "you're" not "your", which is the possessive.

But I would not expect you to understand, as you felt it was necessary to use a word that even CBS doesn't allow.

Too bad liberal.
by ToolMangler1 July 7, 2009 9:49 PM EDT
Hed isn't near being in the same league as Obama.
by stn_sage July 7, 2009 11:21 PM EDT
OH, PUH-LEEZE!

Mr. Ahmadinejad IS the George W. Bush of the Mid-East--- with a beard!

Besides the numerous similar character traits, they BOTH were/are the
illegitimate heads of their respective nations!

No,no,no! You're wrong! Bush is MUCH more like 'Ahmad' than Obama is!
by skyk-2009 July 8, 2009 6:50 AM EDT
speakinup22, I've always loved the arrogance of you folks in the Fringe Right. It makes turning people, normal working people who make normal working people mistakes, against you so easy. As you slowly fade from our sight into the abyss of time we will NOT remember you well. LOL Enjoy!
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