|
As she headed for the university, a prominent women's rights activist, Shadi Sadr,
was beaten by militiamen, pushed into a car and driven away to an
unknown location, according to Mousavi's Web site,
http://www.mowjcamp.com/, and a women's rights site
http://www.meydaan.com/. After the sermon, hundreds of opposition supporters were outside the gates, chanting slogans against Ahmadinejad. Inside the prayers -- held on a former soccer field covered with a roof
-- tens of thousands crowded to hear Rafsanjani. Most were Mousavi backers, wearing green headbands or wristbands or had green prayer rugs
-- the opposition movement's color. They shouted competing slogans with a number of government supporters among the worshippers. Hard-liners made traditional chants of "death to America," while opposition supporters countered with "death to Russia"
-- a reference to government's ties to Moscow. In his sermon, Rafsanjani urged unity and appeared to blame hard-liners for disrupting unity by not listening to the controversy over the election. He also spoke openly of the split among Iran's clerics. Conservative clerics have rallied behind Khamenei, telling their flocks the supreme leader must be obeyed. But many other prominent clerics have been sharply critical or have failed to announce their backing for Ahmadinejad, including most of the country's "maraje'-e-taghlid," or "sources of emulation," Shiite clerics of the highest rank whose religious rulings are closely obeyed by their many followers. "The maraje'-e-taghlid have always supported and served (the people). Why some of them are offended?" Rafsanjani said. "We need to keep them beside us. We need to support them and rely on them." Rafsanjani criticized the crackdown on postelection protests, calling for the release of those arrested. "Sympathy must be offered to those who suffered from the events that occurred and reconcile them with the ruling system. This is achievable. We need to placate them," he told the worshippers in the Tehran University prayer hall. "It's not necessary ... to keep individuals in jail. Let them join their families. We should not let enemies criticize or laugh at us ... for keeping our people in jail," he said.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor