More unrest in Iran, bomber attacks Khomeini shrine
Tehran, June 20, 2009
A suicide bomber blew himself up at the mausoleum of the father of Iran's revolution, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, state media said on Saturday, in an attack coinciding with more unrest over a disputed presidential vote.
'A few minutes ago a suicide bomber exploded himself in the shrine,' police official Hossein Sajedinia was quoted by the semi-official Mehr news agency as saying.
Two people were wounded in the incident in the northern wing of the shrine, another news agency, Fars, said.
Elsewhere in Tehran, riot police deployed in force, firing teargas, batons and water cannons to disperse protesters defying a ban on demonstrations, state media said.
Witnesses said 2,000 to 3,000 people had gathered, far fewer than the hundreds of thousands involved in earlier rallies.
The reported attack on Khomeini's mausoleum seemed likely to stir outrage among Iranians who deeply revere the Shi'ite cleric who led the 1979 revolution that toppled the US-backed shah.
The past week of protests have been the most widespread expression of anti-government feeling since the revolution.
Iran's highest legislative body said it was ready to recount a random 10 percent of the votes cast in the June 12 poll to meet the complaints of Mirhossein Mousavi and two other candidates who lost to president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Mousavi, whose supporters have staged vast unauthorized rallies in the past week, has demanded the election be annulled.
Security forces had turned out in strength to prevent any further rallies in the Iranian capital, a day after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told protest leaders they would be responsible for any bloodshed if unrest continued.
Wafts of teargas
Teargas billowed up from Enghelab (Revolution) Square as riot police confronted demonstrators, a witness said.
A police commander said earlier that his forces would deal firmly with any more street protests over the June 12 vote.
The Etemad-e Melli party of losing candidate Mehdi Karoubi said plans for a rally had been scrapped for lack of a permit and an ally of runner-up Mirhossein Mousavi said the moderate politician had not summoned his followers back to the streets.
The 12-man Guardian Council, which must certify the result of the election, announced plans for a partial recount.
'Although the Guardian Council is not legally obliged ... we are ready to recount 10 percent of the (ballot) boxes randomly in the presence of representatives of the three (defeated) candidates,' a council spokesman said.
The council had invited Mousavi, Karoubi and a third candidate, Mohsen Rezaie, to raise their complaints at a special session. But only Rezaie, a conservative who is a former Revolutionary Guard commander, attended.
Witnesses said they had seen Basij Islamic militia deploying across Tehran and one resident saw at least three buses full of Basij heading for the capital from the nearby city of Karaj on Saturday, as well as four trucks full of the motorcycles used by Basij militiamen during previous demonstrations.
'If there is any bloodshed, leaders of the protests will be held directly responsible,' the white-bearded Khamenei told huge crowds thronging Tehran University for Friday prayers.
State media have reported seven or eight people killed in unrest since the election outcome was published on June 13.
Scores of reformists have been arrested and authorities have cracked down on foreign and domestic media.
US president Barack Obama condemned the violence carried out by security forces and believed Iranians should be free to protest, his spokesman said on Friday after Khamenei's speech, sharpening the White House's rhetoric over the post-election events.
In a sign of defiance, Mousavi backers took to Tehran rooftops after nightfall on Friday to shout A