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Iran's Khamenei Rips Pro-Reform Protests

TEHRAN, Iran - Iran's supreme leader Ali Khamenei sharply criticized pro-reform protesters and raised the possibility of a harsh crackdown Thursday after two days of demonstrations in which some young people chanted "Death to Khamenei!" and threw stones at police.

The demonstrations were the largest against Iran's leadership in months, involving hundreds of young Iranians, some still teenagers. Though they seemed disorganized, with no apparent leadership, the country's hard-line clerics were clearly taking them seriously.

Khamenei, in a speech broadcast on state television and radio, referred to violence in 1999, when security forces and extremist supporters of hard-line clerics attacked students protesting media restrictions. At least one student was killed and the clash touched off the worst street battles since the 1979 revolution that ousted the U.S.-backed shah.

"If the Iranian nation decides to deal with the (current) rioters, it will do so in the way it dealt with it on July 14, 1999," Khamenei said.

Authorities condemned the 1999 attack on students but blamed the ensuing riots on opposition groups. Khamenei took a similar line Thursday, saying his opponents would be held responsible for any violence.

"It should not be allowed that a group of people contaminate society and universities with riots and insecurity, and then attribute it to the pious youth," Khamenei said.

Reformist newspapers, which reflect the thinking of established politicians who have been fighting for change for years, offered little commentary on the unrest.

Though many older Iranians are also frustrated with the regime, they have shown little support for the young protesters. Older Iranians appear to be holding back, fearing the consequences if unrest spirals out of control.

The young demonstrators face a determined foe that has defied popular calls for reform for years and is likely to justify anything done to restore calm — including spilling blood — in the name of Islam.

Exiled opposition groups on the other hand have seized the opportunity created by restless Iranian youth, encouraging dissent through avenues like Los Angeles-based Persian TV channels. U.S. pressure on Iran, which Washington accuses of hiding a nuclear weapons program and harboring terrorists, may have further emboldened those who hope to see the regime toppled.

Late Thursday, hundreds of police locked down central Tehran and blocked off all streets leading to a dormitory housing Tehran University students. Police also prevented people from gathering in the streets.

Some 200 students inside the dormitory grounds threw stones from behind the main gate at the police, who did not respond, according to an Associated Press reporter at the scene.

The atmosphere was far more subdued compared to Wednesday night's clashes, when dozens of militant hard-liners on motorbikes chased about 300 mostly teenage protesters, beating them with sticks in the streets outside the dormitory in the city's Amirabad district. Several people were seen being carried away with head injuries.

That night, around 200 students in the dormitory compound hurled Molotov cocktails and stones at riot police who joined militants in attacking protesters. "Death to Khamenei!" the students shouted.

In Iran, criticism of Khamenei is punished by jail and is rarely heard in public.

Late Tuesday about 80 people were arrested after a small student gathering against privatizing universities grew into an anti-regime demonstration.

"The clerical regime is nearing its end," demonstrators chanted. "Vigilantes commit crimes, the leader supports them."

Demonstrators also called for the resignation of President Mohammad Khatami, a popularly elected reformist, accusing him of not pushing hard enough for change.

Khatami doesn't have the power of unelected hard-liners who control the judiciary and the security forces. But the hard-liners don't have popular support, leaving Iran at a stalemate.

105 posted on 06/12/2003 3:33:04 PM PDT by TexKat
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US Puts Priority on Iraq's Power, Port and Airport

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Despite persistent security problems, the United States aims by the end of next month to have reliable power in Baghdad, open the city's airport and have Iraq's main port ready to handle bulk cargo, a senior U.S. official said on Thursday.

In a public briefing on progress so far in rebuilding Iraq, the U.S. Agency for International Development said it was working hard to deliver on promises made to rebuild Iraq but the country was still a dangerous place to work in.

"You still hear gunfire at night in the cities. There are carjackings that happen daily, people are assaulted for things as simple as a truckload of water," Ross Wherry, USAID's senior reconstruction advisor for Asia and the Near East, told reporters after the briefing.

Wherry said USAID, the leading U.S. agency handing out contracts to rebuild Iraq, had been surprised by the level of violence and looting following the toppling of Saddam Hussein in April and that the difficult security situation was increasing operating costs in Iraq.

He said USAID hoped to have the southern port of Umm Qasr ready for big cargo vessels by the end of this month when a 40,000 ton bulk grain vessel was set to unload its goods.

He said he hoped there would be a more reliable power source by the end of July in Baghdad, which is stiflingly hot during the summer and where electricity has been rationed most days to three hours on and three hours off.

Other goals were to reopen Baghdad's airport by July 15 and to ensure that Iraq's children were back in class at the beginning of the new school year in October, an important symbol for Iraqis that life was returning to normal.

He said a grant had been awarded to UNESCO for 5 million new math and science textbooks and discussions were continuing among Iraqis to rewrite the curriculum and to deal with history and other more politically sensitive text books.

He foresaw USAID would be involved in Iraq until 2005. "I don't see us cutting and running on this one," he said.

Iraqi looters carry copper cables in Basra June 12, 2003. Despite persistent security problems, the U.S. aims by the end of next month to have reliable power in Baghdad, open the city's airport and have Iraq's main port ready to handle bulk cargo, a senior U.S. official said on Thursday. In a public briefing on progress so far in rebuilding Iraq, the U.S. Agency for International Development said it was working hard to deliver on promises made to rebuild Iraq but the country was still a dangerous place to work in.

106 posted on 06/12/2003 3:59:57 PM PDT by TexKat
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