Posted on 07/27/2009 3:05:52 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
If the Iranian mullahs expected the outrage over the rigged presidential election to dissipate, the latest from Mirhossein Mousavi will disappoint the hardliners. The man who claims he was robbed by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei promises to continue the public protests that have made the regime more reliant than ever on its military forces to maintain political power. At the same time, they have even more problems with the man for whom they rigged the election in the first place:
Irans opposition leader Mirhossein Mousavi said on Monday the pro-reform protests which erupted after the countrys disputed June presidential vote will continue, his website reported.
The pro-reform path will continue, Mousavi said in a statement. The establishment should respect the constitution and let us to gather to commemorate our killed loved ones on Thursday.
Moderate defeated candidates Mousavi and Mehdi Karoubi on Sunday called on the authorities to permit a gathering on Thursday at Tehrans Grand Mosala, a prayer location where tens of thousands can gather, to commemorate unrest victims.
The mullahs will not be likely to grant that request, for the same reason that Beijing ensures that no one commemorates the Tiananmen Massacre. Such demonstrations lead to momentum for reform or even revolution, and the best way to avoid that is to keep people from congregating at all. Expect to see a big security presence on Thursday and a big clash with protesters at the same time.
Thats not the only headache in Tehran. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has prompted even more protests by sacking two ministers, favorites of Irans parliament and of Khamenei:
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad fired his intelligence minister and his culture minister resigned under pressure Sunday as further rifts emerged in his camp with just days to go until his controversial inauguration for a second term.
Although Ahmadinejad has frequently replaced his cabinet members over the past four years, Sundays firing and resignation were significant because both Intelligence Minister Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei and Culture Minister Mohammad Hossein Saffar Harandi are especially close to Irans supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, analysts say.
All ministers are close to him, said Amir Mohebbian, a political analyst who shares Ahmadinejads ideology but has been critical of his actions. But these two are closer to the leader.
After taking the country to the brink of revolution by rigging an election for Ahmadinejad, Khamenei gets paid back by having the ingrate attempt his own power play. Keep an eye on this rift. Note, too, that Ahmadinejads inauguration comes the day after the Mousavi protests. This could be a very interesting week in Iran.
I believe you are correct in pointing out the contents of that earlier interview in the UK as being relevant. Fundamental change appears to be taking hold by a growing majority of Iranian citizens in a quest for visible freedoms, along with a secular democratic government free of Islamic influences.
Musavi: “The country of 70 million cannot become a prison for all of them. The more they arrest people, the bigger this movement becomes.”
Exactly. That’s why the rage isn’t dissapating, much to the disappointment of the mullahs.
And it’s Bushes fault...all of that chanting for Freedom.,,,
Thanks Ernest. Backing down isn’t sufficient — the regime must be liquidated.
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