Iranian deputies call for death penalty for opposition leaders

TEHRAN – Iranian deputies called for the death penalty yesterday for opposition leaders they accused of fomenting unrest after…

TEHRAN – Iranian deputies called for the death penalty yesterday for opposition leaders they accused of fomenting unrest after a rally in which a least one person was killed and dozens were wounded, state media said.

Clashes broke out on Monday between security forces and protesters when thousands rallied in sympathy for popular uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia on Monday. They revived mass protests that shook Iran after a presidential vote in 2009.

“[Opposition leaders] Mehdi Karroubi and Mirhossein Mousavi are corrupts on earth and should be tried,” the official IRNA news agency quoted members of parliament as saying in a statement. The statement was signed by 222 lawmakers out of 290.

Being “corrupt on earth” is a charge which has been levelled at political dissidents in the past. It is a capital offence.

READ MORE

A spokesman for the Islamic republic’s judiciary, Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei, said: “Those who created public disorder on Monday will be confronted firmly and immediately.”

One member of parliament, Kazem Jalali, was quoted by the student news agency ISNA as saying two people died in Monday’s events, one of whom was shot dead.

A group of hardline Iranians, including students and clerics, planned to stage a sit-in outside a Tehran judiciary complex on Tuesday, demanding the “immediate trial of Karroubi and Mousavi”, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.

It also said hardline students protested against Mousavi and Karroubi in various universities in Tehran.

Iranian authorities have repeatedly accused opposition leaders of being part of a Western plot to overthrow the Islamic system. The claim has been denied by Mr Mousavi and Mr Karroubi, who were prevented from attending Monday’s Tehran demonstration.

Parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani also accused the United States and its allies of providing support to the opposition following uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, both Western allies.

“The main aim of Americans was to simulate the recent events in the Middle East in Iran to divert attention from those countries,” Mr Larijani said.

Protests against Iran’s clerical establishment seemed to be over yesterday and life in the main cities was back to normal.

At least 20 pro-reform activists were arrested before Monday’s marches. State television called protesters “monarchists, thugs and seditionists” and spoke of “hypocrites” acting for the United States, Britain and Israel. – (Reuters)