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Ahmadinejad defends election victory amid rival's protest
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-06-15 10:12 TEHRAN -- Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad defended his re-election in the country's "most glorious" presidential election on Sunday, but his major challenger Mir-Hossein Mousavi demanded the election result to be annulled.
Ahmadinejad defended his foreign policies especially his policies over the nuclear issue, saying Iran's nuclear issue belonged to the past, signaling that there would be no change in his second term. "Iran's nuclear issue belongs to the past ... Now we want a global disarmament of nuclear weapons," he said, adding that, "We express our readiness to participate in and to manage (the issue)." Ahmadinejad highlighted the increasing clout of his country and ruled out the possibility of any threat. Humiliating such claims of the United States and Israel's military option on Iran's nuclear sites, he said, "these are just propaganda. No power dares to threaten Iran ... Iran will make any attacker regret it. There is no possibility that one does such a stupidity." Asked about the arrests of some reformists and reporters after the announcement of the election result, Iran's president-elect compared the unrest on the streets by his rival camp to the riots after football matches, saying "all the people are equal before the law." Ahmadinejad said the protests would disappear after a while, just like those angry fans wreaking following a defeated football match. On Saturday afternoon, Iran's Interior Minister Sadeq Mahsouli announced that Ahmadinejad won 62.63 percent of the total votes during Friday's vote, while former Prime Minister Mir-Hossein Mousavi got 33.75 percent. After the official declaration, Mousavi, in a statement, protested "strongly" the "obvious" violations in Iran's presidential election. |