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Last updated: 4 February 2012

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Oppostion in Iran is Demanding Referendum, seeks Russia's help

08:24 AM (MSD) July 20, 2009

 Iran’s reformist former president Mohammad Khatami called Sunday for a referendum on the legitimacy of the government in the wake of last month’s disputed presidential election, Iranian Web sites reported.

One of the opposition groups appealed to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to stop supporting Ahmadinejad and at least keep the neutrality.

"There is a  fight in our country between the people's of Iran and the government which remains in power only due to rigged elections and the future belongs to people who choose freedom and emocracy", - states the open letter to Medvedev and continues: "We exxpect from Russia attention to these processes and chamge of its course"

Mr. Khatami’s comments amounted to a bold challenge to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has dismissed the opposition’s claims that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s landslide victory on June 12 was rigged, and has ordered protesters to accept it.

It is unlikely that Iran’s hard-line leaders will accept the referendum proposal. But the fact that Mr. Khatami proposed it at all suggests a renewed confidence within the opposition movement.

That movement received a powerful boost on Friday when an influential former president, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, told a gathering at Tehran that the government had lost the trust of many Iranians, and he called for the release of the protesters arrested since the election.

His speech at Tehran University brought vast crowds of opposition supporters into the streets of the capital, where they chanted antigovernment slogans and clashed with police officers in the largest demonstration in weeks.

Mr. Khatami on Sunday praised Mr. Rafsanjani’s speech and said a referendum would help achieve Mr. Rafsanjani’s goal of restoring trust, reformist Web sites and the BBC’s Persian service reported. He said it should be carried out by an independent body, like the Expediency Council, an arbitration group that is headed by Mr. Rafsanjani.

“If the majority of people accept the situation, we also will accept it,” Mr. Khatami said, Web sites reported.

The referendum proposal coincided with a possible sign that the government was willing to make some concessions. Mr. Khatami was visiting a group of family members of opposition figures who had been arrested since the election, and while there, the arrested men called their relatives from prison for the first time, in what appeared to be a coordinated gesture.

Mr. Rafsanjani traveled over the weekend to the northeastern city of Mashad to discuss the postelection political crisis with high-ranking Shiite clerics. The move was likely to fuel rumors that Mr. Rafsanjani is building clerical support for the opposition. Two of the clerics Mr. Rafsanjani was meeting have declined to congratulate Mr. Ahmadinejad on his victory and may already be sympathetic to the opposition’s claims that the election was rigged for Mr. Ahmadinejad.

Mr. Rafsanjani’s reception in Mashad contrasted strikingly with that of Mr. Ahmadinejad, who was snubbed by at least one top-ranking cleric during his own visit two days earlier.

On Saturday, the government released on bail an employee of the British Embassy in Tehran who was arrested last month and accused of fomenting postelection street protests, Iran’s state-run Press TV reported. The employee, Hossein Rassam, was the head of the security and political division at the embassy, the station reported. Eight other embassy staff members who were arrested had been released.

Although some Iranian conservatives have criticized Mr. Rafsanjani for his speech on Friday, more have made stinging criticisms of Mr. Ahmadinejad over a controversial cabinet appointment made public on the same day. The president named as his first vice president Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, who angered hard-liners by saying in 2008 that Iranians are “friends of all people in the world — even Israelis.” Mr. Mashaei, whose daughter is married to the president’s son, also angered clerics in 2007 when he attended a ceremony in Turkey in which women performed a traditional dance.

On Saturday, Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami, a prominent conservative, called the appointment of Mr. Mashaei “completely unbelievable” and said to promote him was to “ridicule the highest religious authorities.” Other conservatives made similar comments, including figures in the Basij militia. Kayhan, a newspaper close to Ayatollah Khamenei, called the appointment a “mistake” that would “no doubt provoke strong opposition.”

Although many conservatives criticized Mr. Ahmadinejad in the past, especially over his economic policies, most supported him during the protests of the past month. Only now, as he begins to name his new cabinet, have differences begun to emerge again.

Also on Sunday, Iran’s Jahan News reported that Iranian security forces had foiled an effort to assassinate both Mir Hussein Moussavi, the main challenger to Mr. Ahmadinejad, and Mehdi Karroubi, another candidate in the presidential election, both of whom have called the June 12 vote fraudulent. The report attributed the information to unnamed sources and claimed the would-be assassins were from the Mujahedin-e Khalq, a militant group that seeks to overthrow the Iranian government.


10:37 AM (MSK) February 3, 2012
Diplomats failed Thursday to reach agreement on a U.N. resolution aimed at ending the bloodshed in Syria, leaving discussions in limbo pending consultations with their home governments.

10:32 AM (MSK) February 3, 2012
Like most of those  bold enough to have tried a winter assault  on the Kremlin, the leaders of  Russia 's budding protest movement will face a challenge at its next rally that is perhaps far greater than any government force: the weather.

10:19 AM (MSK) February 3, 2012
The Obama administration waived a ban on military assistance to Uzbekistan in a move to bolster ties with a nation that is part of a vital supply line to Afghanistan, but was cut off from aid because of alleged human-rights violations.

02:49 PM (MSK) February 2, 2012
Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin on Wednesday acknowledged that he may not win the presidency in the first round of voting, though he also said that a second round of voting would lead to political turbulence.

02:38 PM (MSK) February 2, 2012
Russia's president signed into law a ban on bribing foreign officials, marking a major step in the country's efforts to stamp out corruption.

02:16 PM (MSK) February 2, 2012
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Wednesday he could face a runoff in the March presidential vote, his first acknowledgement that he may fail to muster enough support for an outright victory.

02:13 PM (MSK) February 1, 2012
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is a hard man to reach these days-especially if you're Hillary Clinton.

01:44 PM (MSK) February 1, 2012
Top Arab and Western diplomats on Tuesday delivered stinging appeals for a swift end to Syria's deepening bloodshed, a procession of entreaties aimed at an audience that was unnamed but broadly understood-Russia.

01:53 PM (MSK) January 31, 2012
Russia   announced on Monday  that it had convinced Bashar al-Assad 's government in  Syria  to start informal negotiations in Moscow with representatives of the opposition in an effort to end a bloody uprising that has left thousands dead.

12:08 PM (MSK) January 31, 2012
Russia has been steadfast in its diplomatic support for the embattled regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, even as Assad becomes ever more isolated within the Arab League and the international community.
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Joel Brinkley

Listening to Vladimir Putin trying to salvage his career as his base of support seems to be crumbling around him, the Russian prime minister sounds more and more like all of those Arab dictators just before their own people turned on them in angry revolt.

'Stability is something that can only be achieved through hard work, by being open to change and ready for long-overdue, well-planned and well-calculated reforms,' Putin declared in an online campaign essay this month.

 So said Syrian President Bashar Assad almost exactly a year ago, just before his own country dissolved into protest, chaos and slaughter.
Joel Brinkley

Listening to Vladimir Putin trying to salvage his career as his base of support seems to be crumbling around him, the Russian prime minister sounds more and more like all of those Arab dictators just before their own people turned on them in angry revolt.

'Stability is something that can only be achieved through hard work, by being open to change and ready for long-overdue, well-planned and well-calculated reforms,' Putin declared in an online campaign essay this month.

 So said Syrian President Bashar Assad almost exactly a year ago, just before his own country dissolved into protest, chaos and slaughter.
Keyur Patel
High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our Ts&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Russia released a preliminary estimate for 2011 GDP growth on Tuesday - and at 4.3 per cent, it looks pretty healthy. The figure crept ahead of analyst expectations, buoyed by a strong recovery in consumer demand over the year, while 2010 growth was revised upwards, also to 4.3 per cent. Renaissance Capital was cautiously bullish, calling the forecast 'reason for a (modest) celebration'.
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