Ahmadinejad only made possible under him by a massive fraud

All conditions are met today in Iran for large scale of the challenge to the regime repression, or even a blood bath. Important grid of streets by the police forces and the militias, Tehran lived yesterday its first day without demonstration against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad since the re-election controversial, June 12, but opponents did not disarm.

Mir Hussein Moussavi, Friday accused Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to have benefited from large-scale fraud, has for the first time strongly criticized the Supreme guide, Ali Khamenei, after the speech of the latter, which ordered the end of the demonstrations. Mir Hussein Moussavi, now is leader of the opposition, while he was at the outset that the candidate for the resulting faction of the regime as opposed to the camp of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was "ready for martyrdom" and asked his supporters to begin a general strike if he was arrested (read below). Several Iranian journalists and influential opposition activists were arrested in recent days, whose daughter, Saturday, the former President, Hashemi Rafsanjani, enemy of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Massive fraud

In a letter to the people of Iran, Mir Hussein Mousavi accused, without naming it, Ali Khamenei to have endangered the Republican character of the Islamic Republic by validating the re-election of Mr. Ahmadinejad, only made possible under him by a massive fraud. If the flight of 11 million ballots seems incredible, it must be recognized that in Iran there is no polling booths or electoral list and that the assessors of the opposition are not deployed to all polling rooms.

State television said that "terrorist agents" with firearms and explosives attacked a mosque at the demonstration Saturday in the opposition. The latter says that these deaths, the first since a week are demonstrators slaughtered when the parade was loaded Saturday night by the police, militia and elements not identified on a motorcycle to rounds of water cannon, tear gas and live bullets. Someone blew Saturday before the mausoleum of Imam Khomeini, father of the "Islamic revolution".

Tehran also attacked with virulence yesterday the Western countries, including accusing Britain sent secret agents to sabotage the vote. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad yesterday called London and Washington to stop their "interference", after the Barack Obama, very careful so far to avoid precisely this kind of charges, to be resolved Saturday to call Tehran to "put an end to all acts of violence and injustice against its own people." German Chancellor Angela Merkel "firmly" called on Tehran to proceed with a new count of the vote and to refrain from any violence against the demonstrators. Nicolas Sarkozy has described as "inexcusable" the behaviour of the Iran "to the legitimate desire of truth of a large part of the Iranian people" in an interview with Qatar News agency. The Iranian Government summoned the ambassadors and representatives of the 27 European countries stationed in Tehran. The authorities have also decided to expel within 24 hours the permanent correspondent for the BBC in Tehran, Jon Leyne, and threatened the British media of "retaliatory measures".

The foreign press does not have the right to cover the events "unauthorized" and must use cookies or the social network Twitter. The mobile phone network is also regularly cut, preventing the demonstrators to coordinate or provide information to foreign journalists.

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