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Iran resumes mass trial of activists, protesters

Sat Aug 1, 2009 3:27 AM EDT
world-news, iran, election, ml, trial, mahmoud-ahmadinejad, mohammad-khatami
Ali Akbar Dareini, Associated Press
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showing 1 of 46 photos
<p>FILE - This June 19, 2009 file photo shows Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, delivering his sermon in front of a picture of the late spiritual leader Ayatollah Khomeini, during the Friday prayers, at the Tehran University campus, in Tehran, Iran. The U.S. is hearing only silence from Iran on its offers of dialogue, despite setting a fall deadline for Tehran to accept. Iran's leaders, who previously seemed cautiously positive about talks, appear too overwhelmed with ensuring their hold on power in the postelection crisis. (AP Photo/Hayat News Agency, Meisam Hosseini, File)</p>

FILE - This June 19, 2009 file photo shows Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, delivering his sermon in front of a picture of the late spiritual leader Ayatollah Khomeini, during the Friday prayers, at the Tehran University campus, in Tehran, Iran. The U.S. is hearing only silence from Iran on its offers of dialogue, despite setting a fall deadline for Tehran to accept. Iran's leaders, who previously seemed cautiously positive about talks, appear too overwhelmed with ensuring their hold on power in the postelection crisis. (AP Photo/Hayat News Agency, Meisam Hosseini, File)

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TEHRAN — Dozens of opposition activists and protesters stood trial in Tehran Saturday on charges of rioting and plotting to topple the ruling Islamic system following the disputed presidential election, Iran's state media reported.

The mass trial in Tehran's hardline Revolutionary Court demonstrates the government's resolve to discredit the reform movement in one blow and bring an end to anti-government protests that have persisted since the June 12 election.

This is the second day of an extraordinary mass trial that started a week ago, although those standing trial Saturday were not the same defendants who attended the court last week. Saturday's session saw new faces including several prominent reformist politicians as well a 23-year old French academic arrested in July.

During the session, a prosecutor read out an indictment outlining what he said was plans by the U.S. and Britain to foment unrest in Iran with the aim of toppling the ruling Islamic system through a "soft overthrow", the official IRNA news agency reported.

The vague indictment also accused the two powers of providing financial assistance to Iran's reformists to undermine hard-line clerics within the ruling system.

Iran has tried to portray the protests following the June 12 election as being led and encouraged by foreign powers, not fueled by internal dissent.

Among those standing trial is Clotilde Reiss, a 23-year-old French woman who was reportedly arrested at Tehran airport on July 1. Senior European Union diplomats have called on Iran to immediately release the French woman lecturer jailed on charges of spying linked to riots over last month's presidential election.

Iranian defendants included Ali Tajernia, a former reformist lawmaker, Shahaboddin Tabatabaei, a prominent leader of the Islamic Iran Participation Front, Iran's largest reformist political party and Ahmad Zeidabadi, an outspoken journalist opposing hard-liners.

Iran's reformist and moderate parties have denounced the mass trial, describing is a "ridiculous show", saying the confessions were obtained from the defendants under duress.

Hundreds of thousands of Iranians marched in days of street protests after the election, denouncing official results that declared President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad the winner.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Regions: Iran , Tehran
  • Public Discussion (6)
blll

Foolish of them. They create martyrs.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Sat Aug 1, 2009 4:33 AM EDT
The TalkerDeleted
Julia Simmons

Well with the kind of lie propaganda being forcefed down our throats....how would we know........the truth or lie or anything else. Most of you are just happy to have one more reason to KILL KILL KILL. Iran has a democracy based on the obvious historical and social facts: islamic democracy. If all you rich Iranians hadn't been so busy trying on Pradas and Charles Jourdan and huge bottles of perfume to go to Disney Land in, the lower classes might not be so fundamentalist and strict in following their only helpers: the ullamah. Most of you can't even point to the Persian Gulf on a globe yet you are telling everybody everywhere what to do and killing them if they don't. Viet Namese and Iraqis and many more know the truth about Americans: drunken loud mouth pigs who think they know everything and are mindless dumb bigots that KILL KILL KILL!!!!! Now let's see you drunken stoned airheads rule Afghanistan and Iran; maybe a little crack pipe brought in by you will work or maybe you can turn half their women into prostitutes like you did in Thailand just so they can eat. sick animals.

    Reply#3 - Sat Aug 1, 2009 8:09 AM EDT
    jeff-852195

    I remember seeing the protesters with english signs, showing the world that the people of Iran were looking for some kind of help, support. And who of course can forget that video of Neda?

    But their cries for help fell on deaf ears, the PEOPLE made it clear what they wanted, they knew the election was rigged, yet hardly any help came, and what were WE doing?

    Oh yeah, now I remember, we were trying to get another ousted leader (by the people) back INTO the govt that threw his sorry butt out in Honduras, yeah that's it.

    You can argue all day what a pit the Middle East is, but the fact that the "freest nation on Earth" did NOTHING to help these poor people break the bondage's of tyranny from such an obvious rigged election makes my stomach turn.

    We had a chance and we blew it, thanks alot Govt.

      Reply#4 - Sat Aug 1, 2009 8:30 AM EDT
      b-page

      Jeff what exactly did you want our government to do? Invade Iran? Yeah that would go over real well.

        #4.1 - Sat Aug 1, 2009 9:04 AM EDT
        Reply
        jeff-852195

        You've obviously never thought of being subtle have you?

        That whole "enemy of my enemy is my friend " kind of deal.

        Then political pressure, us starting it, pure words, other nations following us, (maybe) adding to the pressue of the already (at the time) mounting pressure that was there to begin with from the Iranian people themselves.

        But that doesn't matter now b/c no one had the balls to step up in the first place.

          Reply#5 - Sat Aug 1, 2009 9:36 PM EDT
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