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Mousavi Nephew Among Several Dead in Iran Clashes: Reports
TEHRAN - A reformist website said a nephew of Iranian opposition leader Mirhossein Mousavi was killed in clashes between protesters and security forces in Tehran on Sunday.
An Iranian opposition protester holds stones as he stands opposite security forces during clashes in Tehran. Iran security forces have killed several protesters including opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi's nephew in a fierce crackdown on mass anti-government demonstrations in Tehran, a number of Iranian websites have said.
(AFP) Earlier, the opposition Jaras website said four people had been killed in a second day of violence in Tehran during a Shi'ite Muslim religious festival. Tehran's police chief denied that report.
The Parlemannews website said Ali Mousavi, 20, was killed in clashes on Sunday and his body had been taken to a hospital.
Jaras said unrest also spread to other parts of Iran, including the holy city of Qom, in reports that could not be independently verified.
The events underlined escalating tension in the Islamic Republic six months after a disputed presidential poll plunged the oil producer into turmoil and exposed widening splits within the clerical and political establishment.
Jaras said police shot dead three protesters in central Tehran. It later said a fourth demonstrator was also killed in clashes in the capital, without giving details.
"Three people were killed and two others were wounded when police opened fire at protesters," the website said.
Any such violent incidents could provoke further opposition protests.
"We will kill those who killed our brothers," Jaras quoted demonstrators as chanting.
These were the first reported killings in street protests since widespread unrest and violence in the immediate aftermath of the June poll in which the opposition says more than 70 people died.
The authorities have estimated the post-vote death toll at about half that number, including pro-government militiamen.
Tehran police chief Azizollah Rajabzadeh, speaking about Sunday's protests, said: "So far there have been no reports of killings and no one has been killed up to now," according to the ISNA news agency. He said some arrests had been made.
Tens of thousands of demonstrators had packed the streets of Tehran and clashes also erupted in the cities of Shiraz, Isfahan, Najafabad, Mashhad and Babol, Jaras said.
It said 20 people were detained in Qom and Mashhad and that protests would continue in Tehran on Sunday evening. Shots were heard in northern Tehran after nightfall.
English-language state television reported sporadic clashes in Tehran and said a bank and bus stop were set ablaze, showing pictures of protesters and fires with thick smoke. It said police had fired into the air to disperse demonstrators.
"DECEIVED HOOLIGANS"
The official IRNA news agency said two women and a child were hurt when rioters threw stones at people marking Ashura. It is one of the main Shi'ite holy days when the faithful commemorate the slaying of the Prophet Mohammad's grandson Hussein in Kerbala in present-day Iraq in 680 AD.
The semi-official Fars News Agency said supporters of opposition leader Mousavi "followed the call of the foreign media" and took to the streets -- a reference to the government position that the unrest is being stoked by foreign enemies of the Islamic Republic.
It said the group of "deceived hooligans" damaged public and private property and "disrespected" the holy Shi'ite day of Ashura, without elaborating.
Foreign media have been banned from reporting directly from opposition demonstrations since the June election.
Despite scores of arrests and security crackdowns, opposition protests have flared repeatedly since the June poll, which the opposition says was rigged to secure hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election.
Reformist websites said there had also been clashes in Tehran on Saturday, with baton-wielding riot police firing tear gas and warning shots to disperse Mousavi supporters.
The authorities had warned the opposition against using the two-day Shi'ite Muslim Tasoua and Ashura festival on December 26-27 to revive protests against the clerical establishment.
"The Iranian nation has shown tolerance so far but they should know that the ... system's patience has a limit," Mojtaba Zolnour, a representative of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the Revolutionary Guards, said, Fars reported.
This year's Ashura on Sunday coincided with the traditional seventh day of mourning for leading dissident cleric Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, who died a week ago at the age of 87 in the holy Shi'ite city of Qom.
A spiritual patron of the movement of opposition leader Mirhossein Mousavi, he was a fierce critic of the hardline clerical establishment.
The unrest that erupted after the June vote is the biggest in the Islamic state's 30-year history. Authorities deny opposition charges that voting was rigged.
The turmoil has complicated the international dispute over Iran's nuclear programme, which the West believes may have military ends, not just civilian purposes. World powers have set an end-of-year deadline for Iran to agree a U.N.-drafted deal to ship most of its low-enriched uranium abroad in exchange for fuel for a Tehran research reactor.
It has also set back tentative U.S. moves towards a rapprochement with Iran initiated by U.S. President Barack Obama when he took office in January.



10 Comments so far
Show All"It has also set back tentative U.S. moves towards a rapprochement with Iran initiated by U.S. President Barack Obama when he took office in January."
What a joke. These boys have been laughing at Obama since he came hat in hand to them. Set back? Never began.
Its a disgrace that this administration doesn't support the people of Iran and instead try and placate its dictators.
US dupe took a round in the head.
It's over for global US fascism.
Get that through your skulls.
Or take nine-mill slugs through your skulls.
Sneaker I wish I could share your optimism, but there are still too many people in the USA who seem to be intelligent and kind, but are still hypnotized by Obomber snake tongue.
Pardon me snakes.
Why would people protesting a possibly tainted vote attack worshippers?
Only if the purpose was general bedlam
A typical USA tactic
You just know Blackwater is in this fray assassinating people.
Why are USA an's so focused on Irans electorial dispute when they did so little to oppose two obviously stolenUSA presidential elections?
Why ?
Because they are being lead around by the nose through the idiot box.
Iran is less developed --- it has not yet learned how to control its people with the facade of a two-party 'Vichy' government (and media) to better hide its authoritarian impulse.
Iran apparently also does not have WWF, NASCAR, TV reality shows, or 24x7 'news' coverage of celebrity gate crashers in the palace to more politely distract their citizens from mass protests.
The ruling-elite Empire here could give some of their more advanced "Brave New World" style 'soft power' PR and control techniques to Ahmadinejad and Iran, so that they would have less need to use the older, Orwellian “1984”, 'hard power' techniques.
After all, it’s been almost four decades since Kent State and Black Panther control techniques have had to be used on the now-complacent and "Quiet American" populace.
However, all real Americans left, who have not been distracted or dumbed-down by our own modern, global, sophisticated, two-party, ‘Vichy’ Empire, empathize with the average working-class Iranians and we hope that your fight against the old-style visible elitist Empire in your own country is as successful as our ancestors’ was against the foreign, highly visible ‘red coat’ old-style British Empire that we overthrew.
Many people in many countries have overcome domestic dictators, and even visible foreign empires, and you will succeed independently, driven by your own frustration, courage, honesty, and solidarity.
The best we American people can do currently is to try to keep this damn disguised Global Empire from mucking you up. Please have similar empathy as we try to overcome the more guileful Global corporate/financial/militarist Empire that currently has our country (and others) by the throat.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Wouldn't be surprised if the U.S. is helping stir the "reformist" pot in Iran. Iran has been in the cross-hairs since the overthrow of the shah.
He was, without a doubt, a CIA asset.
It seems that more than half the violence afflicting the world is either incited, supported, created, armed, or perpetuated by the United States. And this has been gone on for the last 100 years (maybe excluding WW2, but including the atomic bombs, and Pearl Harbor which was allowed to happen by US authorities).
We put in a puppet government in Iran before, we'll install another Shah.
Has Iran attacked another country in the last 100 years? Has the US?
How pleasant it is to see the democracy-haters frothing at the mouth, as democracy continues its march across the planet. You lost Iraq, and now Iran is on the brink of becoming a decent and civilized country for ordinary people. Soon you'll only have Mugabe and the North Korean maniac to cheer for.
How shameful to see so-called progressives supporting enemies of the working class.
See here: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/aug/18/iran.middleeast