Cleric calls for rioters' execution

President Barack Obama today praised the bravery of Iranians who protested against a disputed election in the face of "outrageous…

President Barack Obama today praised the bravery of Iranians who protested against a disputed election in the face of "outrageous" violence, while a hardline Iranian cleric called for the execution of leading "rioters".

Iran's top legislative body said it found no major violations in the June 12th presidential election which it described as the "healthiest" since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, but said 10 per cent of ballot boxes would be recounted.

The Guardian Council has rejected a call for annulment of the vote by reformist former prime minister Mirhossein Mousavi, who led mass protests after he was declared a distant second behind incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Mr Obama, who before the poll urged Iran "to unclench its fist", said the events would affect ties between Washington and Tehran, which are locked in a row over Iran's nuclear programme, but it was too early to assess its impact on future dialogue.

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Iranian authorities have used a combination of warnings, arrests and the threat of police action to drive mass rallies off Tehran's street since Saturday with smaller gatherings dispersed with tear gas and baton charges.

Iranian state television said eight Basij militiamen were killed by "rioters" during mass protests in the world's fifth largest oil exporter that erupted after the poll. State media had previously said 20 people were killed in the violence.

Authorities have accused Mr Mousavi of responsibility for the bloodshed, while he says the government is to blame.

Ahmad Khatami, a member of the powerful Assembly of Experts, said the judiciary should charge leading "rioters" as "mohareb" or one who wages war against God.

"I want the judiciary to ... punish leading rioters firmly and without showing any mercy to teach everyone a lesson," Khatami told worshippers at Tehran University today.

"They should be punished ruthlessly and savagely," he said. Under Iran's Islamic law, punishment for people convicted as "mohareb" is execution.

Mr Obama, who said Mousavi had "captured the imagination" of Iranians who want to open up to the West, hailed Mr Mousavi supporters at a White House news conference.

"Their bravery in the face of brutality is a testament to their enduring pursuit of justice. The violence perpetrated against them is outrageous," Mr Obama said.

The US president said he did not take seriously Mr Ahmadinejad's call for him to apologise for criticizing Tehran, "particularly given the fact that the United States has gone out of its way not to interfere with the election process in Iran."

Washington had been hoping to convince Tehran to drop what it suspects are plans to develop nuclear bombs, while also seeking its cooperation in stabilising Afghanistan and Iraq.

The government says its nuclear programme is to generate power.

"Iran's possession of nuclear weapons will trigger an arms race in the Middle East that would be bad ... for the security of the entire region," said Mr Obama, adding: "So even as we clearly speak out in a unified voice in opposition to the violence that's taken place in Iran, we also have to be steady in recognizing that the prospect of Iran with a nuclear weapon is a big problem."

The row over the election has exposed an unprecedented public rift within Iran's ruling elite.

Abbasali Kadkhodai, spokesman for the Guardian Council, said that to remove all ambiguities over the vote, 10 per cent of all ballot boxes would be recounted in the presence of senior officials representing government and opposition.

Political and religious figures should send election-related questions to the council and the defeated candidates had 24 hours to present their representatives for the recount, he told the students' news agency ISNA.

The 12-man Guardian Council's statement leaves little scope for more legal challenges to the election result, short of an attack on the position of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has expressed strong support for Mr Ahmadinejad.

Former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a Mousavi ally, chairs the Assembly of Experts which has the constitutional power to depose Mr Khamenei. The assembly has never tried to do so and Rafsanjani is seen as unlikely to take such a radical step.

Mr Mousavi said he was determined to keep challenging the election results despite pressure to stop.

Reuters