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Cleric for execution of Iran 'rioters'

Last Updated 26 June 2009, 15:46 IST

A hardline Iranian cleric on Friday called for the execution of “rioters” in the latest sign of the authorities’ determination to stamp out opposition to the June 12 presidential election.

Iran’s top legislative body, the Guardian Council, said it had found no major violations in the election, which it called the “healthiest” vote since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
The council had already rejected a call for the annulment of the vote by moderate former prime minister Mirhossein Mousavi, who had led mass protests since he was declared a distant second in the election behind incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

“I want the judiciary to ... punish leading rioters firmly and without showing any mercy to teach everyone a lesson,” Ahmad Khatami told worshippers at Tehran University.
Iranian state television said on Thursday eight Basij militiamen were killed by “rioters” during the protests. State media previously said 20 people were killed in the marches.
Iranian authorities have accused Mousavi of being responsible for the bloodshed, while the moderate former prime minister says the government is to blame.
Khatami, a member of the Assembly of Experts, said the judiciary should charge the leading “rioters” as being “mohareb” or one who wages war against God.

“They should be punished ruthlessly and savagely,” he said. Under Iran’s Islamic law, punishment for people convicted as mohareb is execution.
The authorities have used a combination of warnings, arrests and the threat of police action to drive large demonstrations off Tehran’s street since Saturday with small gatherings dispersed with tear-gas and baton charges.

Seventy professors were detained after meeting Mousavi and his campaign manager was among many arrested. The professors were released on Thursday.

The 12-man Guardian Council’s statement leaves little scope for more legal challenges, short of an attack on the position of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has expressed strong support for Ahmadinejad.  “The Guardian Council has almost finished reviewing defeated candidates’ election complaints... the reviews showed that the election was the healthiest since the revolution ... There were no major violations in the election,” said Abbasali Kadkhodai, spokesman of the council.

Former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a Mousavi ally, chairs the Assembly of Experts which has the constitutional power to depose Khamenei. The assembly has never tried to do so and Rasfanjani is seen as unlikely to take such a radical step.
Group of Eight powers meeting in Trieste will issue a statement calling on Iran to settle the crisis soon through democratic dialogue and peaceful means.

“We deplore post-electoral violence which led to the loss of lives of Iranian civilians and urge Iran to respect fundamental human rights including freedom of expression and ensured by the international treaties it has ratified,” the final draft said.

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(Published 26 June 2009, 15:46 IST)

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