Updated 11:59 pm.EST, Sun November 22, 2009

World|Tue, Jun. 16 2009 05:55 PM EDT

Iranian Christians Dispute Election Results

By Michelle A. Vu|Christian Post Reporter

Many Iranian Christians are refusing to accept their country’s presidential election results that claim hardline incumbent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad the winner, according to a Christian persecution watchdog.

  • Iran
    (Photo: AP / Laurent Emmanuel)
    Iranians demonstrate near the Iranian embassy in Paris, Tuesday June 16, 2009, protesting the outcome of the presidential election in Iran. The clerical government appears to be trying to defuse popular anger and quash unrest by announcing the limited recount even as it cracks down on foreign media and shows its strength by calling supporters to the streets.

Daryush, an Iranian Christian whose name has been changed to protect his identity, told California-based Open Doors USA that the majority of people he spoke to “consider the elections a fraud and don’t accept the results at all.”

Even many people in Shahe Cheragh, a predominantly religious and conservative district of the southwest city of Shiraz, voted for reformist and more liberal candidate Mirhossein Mousavi.

Daryush says many people, Muslims and Christians alike, have been turned off by the election results, accusing it of being rigged and vowing to never participate in an election again because “it was a total fraud.”

Besides Daryush, Open Doors probed deeper and asked 28 other Christians from Tehran, Shiraz and Isfahan, all of whom said they voted for Mousavi, who had promised more religious freedom during his campaign.

Since the announcement of the results, the streets of Tehran and elsewhere have been filled with pro-Mousavi demonstrators. On Tuesday, thousands of pro-reform protesters marched for the second straight day in the Iranian capital. A day earlier, hundreds of thousands of Mousavi supporters had demonstrated in the central streets of Tehran.

Mousavi himself has proclaimed he won the presidential election and is demanding that the government annul Ahmadinejad’s victory and organize a new election.

On Monday, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who is more influential than the Iranian president, said the government will investigate the election. However, his announcement failed to assure Mousavi supporters, who engaged in a massive rally afterwards.

In districts in Shiraz, young people are reportedly being arrested and beaten for denouncing Ahmadinejad’s victory.

“A friend who lives near the university and student dorms told me she heard screaming, shouting and gunfire in the early hours of the morning,” Daryush said. “The predominately young demonstrators are calling Ahmadinejad a dictator and yell chants like ‘Ma dolate zoor nemikhaim’ meaning ‘we don’t want a government of force.’"

“They also yell at the security forces and call them traitors and vote stealers,” the Iranian source reports. “A friend said that within the security forces are pro-Mousavi followers, saying ‘beechareh shodim!’ or ‘we are without hope.’”

Some Iranians had considered Iran to be a “limited” democracy before the election, Daryush said. Although all the candidates were hand picked by the regime, some Iranians felt they could at least choose among them, the Iranian Christian explained.

But this election now has some Iranians lamenting that there is “no democracy at all…we have an Islamic dictatorship.”

In the United States, President Obama has expressed concern about the election results but has refrained from making any strong statements about it being a fraud. He said Tuesday that “it’s not productive, given the history of U.S.-Iranian relations” for the U.S. “to be seen as meddling” in Iranian affairs.

The U.S. and Iran has had no diplomatic relations for 30 years.

Obama voiced hope, however, that dissatisfied Iranians will help their country become more open to debate and democracy.

“We need to continue to pray for the situation in Iran, especially for the Christians caught in the crossfire,” says Open Doors USA president and CEO Carl Moeller. “This could be a pivotal point in the history of Iran and the future of believers who live there.”

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  • Thu Jun 18, 2009 12:11 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    We definitely must pray for Iranian Christians and all the Iranians, that they may have a less repressive government and a country where they are free to believe whatever they want. Christianpost had an article about Iranian Christian coverts being arrested in Iran, b/c it's illegal to convert. Here's an interesting article about the astonishingly high presence of persecution of Christians worldwide, that still occurs today!: http://www.mindreign.com/en/mindshare/World-Politics-and-Current-Events/Free-to-be-Christian-3f-A-Look-around-the-Globe/sl34045952bp284cpp10pn1.html

  • Thu Jun 18, 2009 12:05 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    This will be the repetition of what happend by displacing
    the Shaw of Iran, 30 years back. The people of Iran will not give up
    this time, and a pro-democatic regime will take over.
    It will also give more freedom for the Christian
    community to spread the good news of changed lives through Jesus Christ.

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