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The anniversary is highlighted by a massive pro-regime rally in Tehran's Azadi Square. But protesters now use important religious and political commemorations to stage their own rallies, which have brought bloody confrontations with security forces and unprecedented acts of defiance against Khamenei. In the last major protest marches -- timed to overlap with an important Shiite day of mourning in late December
-- at least eight people died in clashes, including a nephew of opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi. Since the first days after the disputed election, Iranians wanting to vent their anger have taken to their rooftops after dark to shout "Allahu Akbar," or "God is Great"
-- repeating one of the protest rituals of the Islamic Revolution. A top banking official, Ebrahim Darvishi, said that as of Jan. 7, banks would no longer accept cash with graffiti or stamps, state media reported. Some bank notes with protest messages, however, were noticed days after the deadline, according to witnesses in Tehran who spoke on condition of anonymity because of fear of arrest. Last month, the Central Bank of Iran governor, Mahmoud Bamani, said writing slogans on money would be considered a crime.
But the images of the bills have become a favorite posting on Facebook, YouTube and Twitter
-- the same Internet sites that Iranian officials are trying to muzzle. It's the simple-but-potent aspect of the money campaign that captured most praise. One Farsi blogger featured pictures of the protest cash under the heading "Money Talks."
[Associated
Press;
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