Iran: Massive protests in response to Ahmadinejad sweeping elections.

Pintu

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France summons Iranian ambassador over vote concern | Reuters

France summons Iranian ambassador over vote concern

Mon Jun 15, 2009 7:46am EDT

PARIS, June 15 (Reuters) - France summoned the Iranian ambassador in Paris to express its concern over events surrounding a contested presidential election, the foreign ministry said on Monday.

"We hope that the ambassador will explain events in Iran and he will hear our concerns," foreign ministry spokesman Eric Chevallier said in a statement.

Germany announced on Sunday it was going to summon the Iranian ambassador in Berlin to protest against events in Iran.

Chevallier said the Iranian envoy would be received later on Monday.

"France, like its European Union partners, expects a clear response to doubts expressed over the fairness of the election," he added, condemning a wave of arrests that have reportedly occurred in Iran over the weekend.

Protesters clashed with police in Tehran at the weekend after Iranian authorities declared hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad outright winner in the presidential ballot.

Supporters of Ahmadinejad's main rival, Mirhossein Mousavi, have denounced the vote as a fraud.

"...France condemns the brutal repression of peaceful protests and the repeated attacks on the liberty of the press and freedom of speech," Chevallier wrote in his statement.
 
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the west is trying to do everything to prove the elections were a sham and it won't make one bit of difference to the Iranians, who by the way had elections unlike many who come in power in pakistan a US ally.
 

EnlightenedMonk

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the west is trying to do everything to prove the elections were a sham and it won't make one bit of difference to the Iranians, who by the way had elections unlike many who come in power in pakistan a US ally.
And the US isn't making a big noise about the entire issue since they need Iran's support and it is pivotal amongst the muslim nations with which Obama wants to build a relationship...

Also, possibly the negotiations of nuclear disarmament and possible supply routes into Afghanistan prevent the US from saying anything concrete...
 
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And the US isn't making a big noise about the entire issue since they need Iran's support and it is pivotal amongst the muslim nations with which Obama wants to build a relationship...

Also, possibly the negotiations of nuclear disarmament and possible supply routes into Afghanistan prevent the US from saying anything concrete...
US will have to deal with ahmedajad who may not be a easily bought complete puppet like they are use to in dealing with pakistan.
 

Yusuf

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The Ayatollah has talked with Mousavi and told him that his concerns will be taken into account and investigations will take place.
 

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What are Mousavi's options now?

What are Mousavi's options now?

Iran's supreme leader ordered the Guardian Council to investigate the candidate's claims of electoral fraud. But the council is headed by a cleric cut from the same cloth as President Ahmadinejad.

By Scott Peterson | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

ISTANBUL, TURKEY

Defying an explicit government ban to hold a rally, an estimated 100,000 Iranians stretching for miles across downtown Tehran marched to support Mir Hossein Mousavi, the moderate presidential candidate who says he is the rightful winner over incumbent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Standing atop a car amid an ocean of his supporters – many of them wearing the green of the campaign – Mr. Mousavi shouted to the crowd: "God willing, we will take back our rights!"

Politically and procedurally, options are very limited for the Mousavi camp to challenge Mr. Ahmadinejad's declared 2-to-1 landslide victory in the Islamic Republic.

"They can't change anything. It's done," said a political analyst in Tehran who requested anonymity, given the current situation.

In a bid to ease three days of street protests and violence in the capital and across the country, Iran's supreme religious leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Sunday ordered the powerful Guardian Council to "carefully probe" allegations of fraud listed in a letter from Mousavi that called for results to be annulled because of fraud.

Although some Mousavi supporters might see hope in that action, experts in Tehran are skeptical that Mr. Khomeini would adjust a result. On Saturday – just a day after the vote, instead of the customary three – he sanctioned Ahmadinejad's victory, calling it a "divine assessment."

COUNCIL CHIEF CUT FROM SAME CLOTH AS AHMADINEJAD

The powerful Guardian Council includes six clerics appointed by Khomeini, known as the supreme leader, and six jurists selected by the judiciary chief and confirmed by the parliament. Its head is Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, a hard-line cleric cut from the same archconservative cloth as Ahmadinejad.

There is "no chance, absolutely" that the council will change the result, says the Tehran analyst. "I gather this is just something for saving face."

Mousavi has no options except for rallies like the one held on Monday, or continuing protests and rioting in the face of an escalating use by the regime of riot police, ideological militias, and vigilantes.

Monday's illegal rally marked the first public appearance for the defeated candidate since Friday's hotly contested election. Mousavi has vowed to fight for those who cast votes for him and were galvanized by their anti-Ahmadinejad views to make an unprecedented turnout of more than 80 percent.

"The vote of the people is more important than Mousavi or any other person," Mousavi said.

MOUSAVI FOLLOWERS REKINDLE PRE-VOTE FERVOR

Footage from the demonstration showed a crowd estimated at 100,000 that stretched for several miles in central Tehran – a counterpoint to the tens of thousands who turned out on Sunday to cheer Ahmadinejad at his victory rally.

Completely outnumbered, riot police reportedly stood by, helmets off and shields lowered. But if past days are any guide, the stage was set for another round of fierce clashes into the night.

Overnight Sunday, police reportedly raided student dormitories at Tehran University, where some 3,000 students had earlier held an anti-Ahmadinejad rally. Rooms were damaged, computers smashed, and hard drives taken, and students beaten and arrested, according to the Associated Press (AP).

On Monday, AP reported that one of its photographers witnessed Iranian security forces firing at the crowd, killing one person and seriously wounding several others.

The violence has been some of the worst in a decade. But there was no question who ruled the streets on Monday, as people reportedly came out of apartments to join the throng – rekindling for a moment the self-confidence exhibited by Mousavi supporters in electrifying street demonstrations before the vote.
 

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BBC NEWS | Middle East | Obama 'troubled' by Iran violence

Obama 'troubled' by Iran violence

US President Barack Obama says he is "deeply troubled" by violence in Iran following last week's disputed presidential elections.

Mr Obama called on Iran's leaders to respect free speech and the democratic process, and said he would continue pursuing tough dialogue with Iran.

His comments came after hundreds of thousands defied a government ban and attended an opposition rally in Tehran.

At least one person was killed after shots were fired during the protest.

In his first public comments on the situation in Iran, Mr Obama said: "I am deeply troubled by the violence that I've been seeing on television.

"I think that the democratic process, free speech, the ability for folks to peacefully dissent, all those are universal values and need to be respected."

But the BBC's Jonathan Beale, in Washington, says the president studiously avoided any comment on the allegations of vote fraud.

"We respect Iranian sovereignty and want to avoid the United States being the issue inside of Iran," Mr Obama said.

'Political earthquake'

Earlier on Monday, hundreds of thousands of people, some shouting "death to the dictator", marched through the streets of Tehran to protest against the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Iran's conservative-dominated Guardian Council is considering complaints filed by Mir Hossein Mousavi and fellow defeated candidate Mohsen Rezai, alleging that the poll was rigged.

The BBC's Jon Leyne, in Tehran, says the rally was the biggest demonstration in the Islamic republic's 30-year history and described it as a "political earthquake".

The government had outlawed any protest following two days of unrest, with the interior ministry warning that "any disrupter of public security would be dealt with according to the law".

Despite this, correspondents said riot police had been watching the rally during the afternoon and had seemed to be taking no action.

The first indications of trouble came at about 2045 local time (1615 GMT), when protesters were beginning to disperse from Tehran's Azadi (Freedom) Square.

An Iranian photographer told AFP news agency that the shooting happened outside a base of the Basij volunteer militia, which was set on fire. The dead man had been shot in the head.

Pictures of the incident showed armed men, in civilian clothes but wearing helmets, pointing guns at the crowds from the roof of the base. The photographer said the protester had been killed by shots fired by the armed men.

Other sources told the BBC as many as six people might have died in the incident.

A BBC correspondent said there had also been gunfire in the north of the city - traditionally an anti-government stronghold - and that the security forces appeared to be hunting down protesters.

There was a large police presence on major streets of the city on Monday night, but evidence of few ordinary people, our correspondent added.

Earlier, the demonstrators had gathered in Tehran's Enghelab (Revolution) Square, chanting pro-Mousavi slogans.

"Mousavi we support you. We will die, but retrieve our votes," they shouted, many wearing the green of Mousavi's election campaign.

Mr Mousavi eventually appeared, addressing the crowd from the roof of his car.

"The vote of the people is more important than Mousavi or any other person," he told his supporters.

Elsewhere in Iran, pro-Mousavi demonstrators were reported to have clashed with police in the historic city of Esfahan and the north-eastern city of Mashhad.

Police in Shiraz, south-west Iran, fired into the air to disperse demonstrations, witnesses said.

A crowd of about 2,000 people also took to the streets in the heavily Arab city of Ahvaz near the Iraqi border, reports say.

Mr Mousavi has said that another rally is planned for Tuesday in north Tehran.

The 12-member Guardian Council is due to meet Mr Mousavi and Mr Rezai on Tuesday to discuss their grievances.

State television reported that Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has upheld the election result, urged the Guardian Council to "precisely consider" the complaints.

But the Iranian leadership has put itself in an impossible position, our Tehran correspondent says.

He says that Ayatollah Khamenei has given his complete endorsement to the election result and to President Ahmadinejad, and by doing so he has put at risk the very foundations of the Islamic republic.

'Completely unacceptable'

Dozens of opposition activists have been arrested since the protests began, while internet sites appear to have been blocked and the media heavily restricted.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he was following the situation closely.

"The position of me and the United Nations is that the genuine will of the Iranian people should be fully respected," he told reporters.

EU foreign ministers expressed "serious concern" and called for an inquiry into the conduct of the election, while France and Germany each summoned their Iranian ambassadors to explain what was going on.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel criticised the use of "completely unacceptable" force against protesters and called for a "transparent evaluation of the election result".

While the result of the election is disputed, correspondents note that Mr Ahmadinejad does have the backing of millions of Iranians.

Groups of his supporters gathered outside French and British embassies in Tehran on Monday, protesting against what they consider to be foreign interference in Iran's affairs.

"We have gathered here to protest the hidden interference of the Brits and the world, who are trying to create chaos in our country," one protester said.
 

Pintu

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http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/16/world/middleeast/16media.html?ref=media

Social Networks Spread Iranian Defiance Online



Newsha Tavakolian/Polaris, for The New York Times

Hundreds of thousands of Iranians marching in support for the presidential opposition candidate Mir Hussein Moussavi.


By BRAD STONE and NOAM COHEN
Published: June 15, 2009

As the embattled government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad appears to be trying to limit Internet access and communications in Iran, new kinds of social media are challenging those traditional levers of state media control and allowing Iranians to find novel ways around the restrictions.

Iranians are blogging, posting to Facebook and, most visibly, coordinating their protests on Twitter, the messaging service. Their activity has increased, not decreased, since the presidential elections on Friday and ensuing attempts by the government to restrict or censor their online communications.

On Twitter, reports and links to photos from a peaceful mass march through Tehran on Monday, along with accounts of street fighting and casualties around the country, have become the most popular topic on the service worldwide, according to Twitter’s published statistics.

A couple of Twitter feeds have become virtual media offices for the supporters of the leading opposition candidate, Mir Hussein Moussavi. One feed, mousavi1388, (1388 is the year in the Persian calendar) is filled with news of protests and exhortations to keep up the fight, in Persian and English. It has more than 7,000 followers.

Mr. Moussavi’s fan group on Facebook has swelled to over 50,000 members, a significant increase since election day.

Labeling such seemingly spontaneous antigovernment demonstrations a “Twitter Revolution” has already become something of a cliché. That title was already given to the protests in Moldova in April.

But Twitter is aware of the power of its service. Acknowledging its role on the global stage, the San Francisco-based company said Monday that it was delaying a planned shutdown for maintenance for a day, citing “the role Twitter is currently playing as an important communication tool in Iran.”

Twitter users are posting messages, known as tweets, with the term #IranElection, which allows users to search for all tweets on the subject. On Monday evening, Twitter was registering about 30 new posts a minute with that tag.

One read, “We have no national press coverage in Iran, everyone should help spread Moussavi’s message. One Person = One Broadcaster. #IranElection.”

The Twitter feed StopAhmadi calls itself the “Dedicated Twitter account for Moussavi supporters” and has more than 6,000 followers. It too sends visitors to the Flickr feed from the rally.

The feed Persiankiwi, which has more than 15,000 followers, sends users to a page in Persian that is hosted by Google and, in its only English text, says, “Due to widespread filters in Iran, please view this site to receive the latest news, letters and communications from Mir Hussein Moussavi.”

Some Twitter users were also going on the offensive. On Monday morning, an antigovernment activist using the Twitter account “DDOSIran” asked supporters to visit a Web site to participate in an online attack to try to crash government Web sites by overwhelming them with traffic.

By Monday afternoon, many of those sites were not accessible, though it was not clear if the attack was responsible — and the Twitter account behind the attack had been removed. A Twitter spokeswoman said the company had no connection to the deletion of the account.

The crackdown on communications began on election day, when text-messaging services were shut down in what opposition supporters said was an attempt to block one of their most important organizing tools. Over the weekend, cellphone transmissions and access to Facebook and some other Web sites were also blocked.

Iranians continued to report on Monday that they could not send text messages.

But it appears they are finding ways around Big Brother.

Many Twitter users have been sharing ways to evade government snooping, such as programming their Web browsers to contact a proxy — or an Internet server that relays their connection through another country.

Austin Heap, a 25 year old IT consultant in San Francisco, is running his own private proxies to help Iranians, and advertising them on Twitter. He said on Monday that his servers were providing the Internet connections for about 750 Iranians at any one moment.

“I think that cyber activism can be a way to empower people living under less than democratic governments around the world,” he said.

Global Internet Freedom Consortium, an Internet proxy service with ties to the banned Chinese spiritual movement Falun Gong, offers downloadable software to help evade censorship. It said its traffic from Iran had tripled in the last week.

Shiyu Zhou, founder of the organization, has no idea how links to the software spread within Iran. “In China we have sent mass e-mails, but nothing like in Iran,” he said. “The Iranian people actually found out by themselves and have passed this on by word of mouth.”

Jonathan Zittrain, a professor at Harvard Law School who is an expert on the Internet, said that Twitter was particularly resilient to censorship because it had so many ways to for its posts to originate — from a phone, a Web browser or specialized applications — and so many outlets for those posts to appear.

As each new home for this material becomes a new target for censorship, he said, a repressive system faces a game of whack-a-mole in blocking Internet address after Internet address carrying the subversive material.

“It is easy for Twitter feeds to be echoed everywhere else in the world,” he said. “The qualities that make Twitter seem and inane and half-baked are what makes it so powerful.”
 

F-14

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I for one havent seen such massive demos sinces the 1970's
 

Pintu

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AFP: Protester 'shot dead' at mass Tehran rally

Protester 'shot dead' at mass Tehran rally

By Farhad Pouladi and Jay Deshmukh – 11 hours ago

TEHRAN (AFP) — A protester was reportedly shot dead and several people were wounded during clashes in Tehran as massive crowds defied a ban to stage a rally against the disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

International criticism of the crackdown on opposition protests and the election mounted, with US President Barack Obama saying he was "deeply troubled" by the violence.

An Iranian photographer, declining to be named, told AFP that the incident occurred in front of a local base of the Basij volunteer militia, which was set on fire. The dead man had been shot in the head.

Pictures of the incident showed armed men, wearing helmets and in civilian clothes, pointing guns at the crowds from the rooftop of the base. The photographer said the protester was killed by shots fired by the armed men.

If the death is confirmed, it would be the first since the violence erupted, the worst in Iran since students demonstrations in 1999 triggered a week of unrest across the nation.

An AFP correspondent at the rally also said police had clashed with protesters and that crowds of people were seen fleeing. He said shots were heard and a plume of thick black smoke billowed into the sky above a central square.

Police also fired tear-gas as dozens of protesters set several motorbikes, tyres and dustbins ablaze.

Witnesses said that the clashes erupted at the end of the rally when armed men dressed in plainclothes who did not appear to belong to the police force started shooting at people.

Amid the escalation, Iran's electoral watchdog, the Guardians Council, said it will soon take a decision on the complaints of vote-rigging filed by defeated presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi.

The violence flared after Mousavi appeared in public for the first time since an election that has sharply divided the nation and triggered a wave of protests and rioting.

"God willing, we will take back our rights," Mousavi shouted from the roof of a car amid a sea of hundreds of thousand of Iranians, young and old, who packed into central Tehran despite the authorities ordering a ban on the rally.

Iran, battling one of its worst crises since the Islamic revolution three decades ago, faced a growing international backlash over the validity of Friday's election and the subsequent crackdown on opposition protests.

In his first public comments since the disputed election, Obama called on Iranian leaders to respect free speech and democracy, saying that "it is up to Iranians to make a decision about who Iran's leaders will be."

Obama added that he was "deeply troubled" by the violence he had been seeing in television news broadcasts from Tehran.

"Whenever I see violence perpetrated on people who are peacefully dissenting, and whenever the American people see that, I think they're rightfully troubled."

"I think it's important that moving forward, whatever investigations take place are done in a way that is not resulting in bloodshed and is not resulting in people being stifled in expressing their views," he added.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon has called for the will of the Iranian people to be "fully respected."

European governments complained about the tactics used against protesters and added their voices to US doubt over the election outcome, with the EU calling on Tehran to launch a probe into the results.

"The regime must address the serious questions which have been asked about the conduct of the Iranian elections," British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said.

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier described the action of the security forces as "completely unacceptable," while French President Nicolas Sarkozy he wanted "full light" to be shed on the vote.

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ordered a probe into allegations of vote-rigging after Ahmadinejad was returned to power in a landslide, an election that dented Western hopes of a change in domestic and foreign policy of the oil-rich nation.

State television said Khamenei -- the all-powerful spiritual leader of the Islamic republic since 1989 -- had told Mousavi he had instructed the Guardians Council supervisory body "to precisely examine" his complaints.

The Council head said a decision would be taken soon.

"I hope it will not take long that the noble people will see that the question has been examined in the best way and we will give the result to the people," Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati said on state television.

A spokesman for the 12-member Guardians Council had earlier said it would announce its decision in 10 days.

Mousavi, 67, lodged a formal appeal on Sunday for the cancellation of the results of what he charges was a rigged "charade."

"The vote of the people is more important than Mousavi or any other person," Mousavi told the crowds on Monday.

Demonstrators, some wearing the green of Mousavi's campaign colour, swarmed into central Tehran as riot police looked on. One policeman said between 1.5 million and two million people had turned out.

Monday's demonstration comes a day after the combative Ahmadinejad himself addressed a vast victory rally in Tehran to defend the results, saying the people of Iran had triumphed against the "world arrogance" (the West).

The authorities have warned that they would crush any "velvet revolution" in Iran and police said on Sunday they had rounded up 170 people over the protests, including a number of reformist leaders.

On Saturday, Tehran witnessed widespread clashes between riot police who clubbed and tear-gassed stone-throwing protestors who set bins and vehicles on fire in violence on a scale not seen in a decade.

The Iranian authorities have also cracked down on local and foreign media, with Mousavi's own newspaper reportedly suspended and international outlets reporting the arrest and harassment of their journalists.

Telephone and Internet services have also been disrupted.
 

Pintu

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BBC NEWS | Special Reports | Iran 'to hold election recount'

Iran 'to hold election recount'


Supporters of Mir Hossein Mousavi defied a ban on protest rallies

Iran's powerful Guardian Council says it is ready to recount disputed votes from Friday's presidential poll.

Moderate candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi has contested President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election, alleging widespread fraud.

The BBC's Jon Leyne in Tehran says the council's announcement is a complete U-turn. The official results sparked three days of huge protests.

Iranian radio says seven people were killed during demonstrations on Monday.

The Guardian Council - Iran's supreme legislative body - said votes would be recounted in areas contested by the losing candidates.

Our correspondent says it is not clear whether the offer will be accepted by Mr Ahmadinejad's rivals, who want the election annulled.

The opposition says millions of ballots may have gone astray.

The council, which is considering an appeal by Mr Mousavi and another defeated candidate, had earlier said the results were only provisional.

New demonstrations have been called by supporters of both President Ahmadinejad and Mr Mousavi and are due to take place in Vali Asr Square in central Tehran.

Monday's protest involved hundreds of thousands of people and was one of the largest since the Iranian revolution 30 years ago.

The radio report said the attack occurred at the end of the "illegal" rally as people were heading home "peacefully".

"Several thugs wanted to attack a military post and vandalise public property in the vicinity of Azadi Square," the radio said referring to the site of the protest.

"Unfortunately seven people were killed and several others wounded in the incident."

Dozens of opposition activists have been arrested since the protests began.

A number of senior reformist politicians, including former Vice-President Mohammad Ali Abtahi and Mousavi ally Saeed Hajarian, were detained overnight, reports said.

There are reports of fresh demonstrations at Tehran University - one of the main centres of tension in recent days. About 120 university lecturers have resigned.

The powerful Speaker of parliament, Ali Larijani, has condemned an attack by police and militia on a student dormitory.

Iranian media quoted him as saying: "The interior minister is responsible in this regard."

Unrest has been reported in other parts of Iran. One of Mr Mousavi's websites said a student had died on Monday in clashes with hardliners in the southern city of Shiraz.

Foreign concern

Our correspondent says the authorities appear to be weakening in their support for President Ahmadinejad.

The country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has ordered an inquiry into the allegations of vote-rigging.

The authorities' handling of the protests has drawn international criticism.

EU foreign ministers expressed "serious concern" and called for an inquiry into the conduct of the election.

US President Barack Obama said he was "deeply troubled" by the violence in Iran.

Meanwhile, President Ahmadinejad arrived in Russia on Tuesday.

He told a regional summit that the "age of empires" had ended, but made no mention of the protests.
 

Pintu

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Iran protests interventionist U.S. statements | Reuters

Iran protests "interventionist" U.S. statements

Wed Jun 17, 2009 9:26am EDT

TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran's Foreign Ministry summoned the Swiss ambassador, who represents U.S. interests in Tehran, on Wednesday to protest at "interventionist" U.S. statements on the country's June 12 election, Fars News Agency reported.

The Foreign Ministry communicated Iran's "protest and displeasure" over statements by U.S. government officials about the outcome of the presidential vote, Fars said.

A senior Canadian diplomat in Tehran had also been summoned to the ministry, the semi-official news agency said. On Tuesday, several European ambassadors were also summoned.

Major Western nations have questioned the fairness of the official vote results which showed hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had won a landslide against moderate Mirhossein Mousavi. The result sparked days of protests in Tehran and elsewhere.

U.S. President Barack Obama said the upheaval showed that "Iranian people are not convinced with the legitimacy of the election."

The United States severed ties with Tehran shortly after Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution. After he took office in January, Obama has offered a new beginning of engagement with Iran if it "unclenches its fist."

(Reporting by Hashem Kalantari; writing by Fredrik Dahl)
 

tharikiran

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Guys.
Just have a look at #iranelection on twitter.

It's overwhelming.
 

Singh

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I hope Iran gets another revolution, these guys deserve to be rid of the mullahs..
 

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