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Protest rallies in Tehran against Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

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  • Protest rallies in Tehran against Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

    Protest rallies in Tehran against Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
    13.06.2009 19:08 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The victory of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad triggered mass
    opposition protests and furious complaints of cheating from his
    defeated rivals, AFP reports.
    Riot police clashed with protestors in unrest not seen for a decade as
    thousands of supporters of main challenger Mir Hossein Mousavi took to
    the streets shouting "Down with the Dictator" after final results
    showed Ahmadinejad winning almost 63 percent of the vote.
    Moderate ex-premier Mousavi cried foul over election irregularities
    and warned the vote could lead to "tyranny," as some of his supporters
    were beaten by baton-wielding police.
    The interior minister said Mousavi had won less than 34 percent of the
    vote, giving Ahmadinejad another four-year term in a result that
    dashed Western hopes of change and set the scene for a possible
    domestic power struggle.
    Iran's all-powerful supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei hailed
    Ahmadinejad's victory and urged the country to unite behind him after
    the most heated election campaign since the Islamic revolution,
    The vote outcome appears to have galvanised a grass-roots movement for
    change after 30 years of restrictive clerical rule in a country where
    60 percent of the population was born after the revolution.
    The international community had also been keenly watching the election
    for any signs of a shift in policy after four years of hardline
    rhetoric from the 52-year-old Ahmadinejad and a standoff over Iran's
    nuclear drive.
    Mousavi protested at what he described as "numerous and blatant
    irregularities" in the vote which officials said attracted a record
    turnout of around 85 percent of the 46 million electorate.
    In the heart of Tehran, thousands of angry Mousavi supporters voiced
    their disbelief and frustration at the results, with some pelting
    stones at police who struck back with batons.
    Reformist candidate Mehdi Karroubi, who came a distant fourth with
    less than one percent of the vote after ex-Revolutionary Guards chief
    Mohsen Rezai in third, also declared the result "illegitimate and
    unacceptable".
    Ahmadinejad's supporters had earlier taken to the streets in triumph,
    honking their horns and waving Iranian flags.
    The election highlighted deep divisions in Iran after four years under
    Ahmadinejad, who had massive support in the rural heartland, while in
    the big cities young men and women threw their weight behind Mousavi.
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