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Saturday, 25 June 2005 |
President Elect's Statements Maryam Rajavi: Election boycott was a
historic 'no' to mullahs' regime, 'yes' to democratic change in Iran
To continue appeasing mullahs is tantamount to complicity in
suppression, facilitating nuclear weapons procurement and giving free
rein to export of terrorism
In a message to the Iranian people, Mrs. Maryam Rajavi congratulated
them on the nationwide solid boycott of yesterday's sham elections,
saying that it amounted to a complete rejection of the clerical regime.
"An assassin and a terrorist has assumed the presidency of mullahs'
regime," Mrs. Rajavi said. "Now, the world can clearly see that reform
of the clerical state was nothing more than a catastrophic, eight-year
road from religious fascism to religious fascism, which Khatami and his
spin-doctors demagogically called 'religious populism.'" |
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Friday, 24 June 2005 |
StatementsEmboldened by the report against the People’s Mojahedin of
Iran (PMOI) by the U.S.-based Human Rights Watch, the Iranian Ministry
of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) has stepped up its threats against
the Iranian Resistance’s sympathizers and activists in and out of Iran.
The new wave of intimidation and efforts to set the stage for terrorist
activities abroad is overseen by MOIS deputy Mohammad Reza Irvani, who
has been responsible for assassination of dissidents abroad and the
chain murders in Iran.
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Friday, 24 June 2005 |
Iran – election – statement no. 1
Based on reports received until 11:00 am, local time, hundreds of
polling stations in Tehran and other cities were deserted, which
reflected a decisive boycott of the election. |
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Friday, 24 June 2005 |
Iran – election – statement no. 2 - The clerical regime
announced that the number of eligible voters had risen by 150,000 from
June 17 to June 24. |
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Friday, 24 June 2005 |
Iran – election – statement no. 3 - Reports by the Iranian
Resistance’s observers from Tehran and other cities indicate that
polling stations have been deserted by voters.
In Tehran, in Imam Ali mosque in Pirouzi Street, Soudmand high school,
Kowthar mosque in and Ostad Shahriar school in Ghanat Kowthar Streets, |
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Friday, 24 June 2005 |
Iran – election – statement no. 4 - Reports from Tehran
indicate that the vast majority of the polling stations across the
capital were empty.
No one has gone to vote in Abolfazl mosque in and Mottahari Labor and
Knowledge Training College on Seraj Street, as well as in Imam Reza
training center on Zamani Street |
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Friday, 24 June 2005 |
Iran – election – statement no. 5 - Reports from within the
regime are indicative of discord and disarray among international
factions over the low voter turn out.
An Interior Ministry official said the situation in Tehran was a
fiasco. In Tehran’s mosques, the paramilitary Bassij rushed to the
polling stations to collect votes. |
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Thursday, 23 June 2005 |
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Reports from Iran indicate that around 8:00 pm today, hundreds of
Tehran University students used the disqualification of some 1,000
candidates in the Presidential election farce as pretext to hold a
protest gathering at the University and surrounding areas |
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Thursday, 23 June 2005 |
Disqualifying 1,000 candidates for Presidential election sham demonstrates clerical regime’s illegitimacy and lack of future
The mullahs’ Guardian Council disqualified more than 1,000 candidates
for the upcoming presidential election sham, approving only six as
being eligible to run |
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