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Canadian journalist detained in Iran

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CTV News: Rosemary Thompson on the arrest
CTV News: Freelance journalist George McLeod in Tehran, reporting on the current conditions
CTV News: Joy Malbon on the increasing clashes in Iran
CTV Montreal: Hundreds protest in Montreal to support democracy in Iran
CTV News Channel: George McLeod, freelance journalist from Tehran
CTV News Channel: Rafal Rohzinski, CEO, Psiphon Inc. on the communications firewall
CTV News Channel: Hadi Ghaemi, director of International Campaign for Human Rights
CTV News Channel: Bahman Roudgarnia, Radio Seda-ye Iran, on what Iranians are actually protesting
CTV National News: Tom Walters reports on the bloodshed and lives lost during the protests
CTV British Columbia: Stephen Smart with reaction from Iranian-Canadians

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CTV.ca News Staff

Date: Sun. Jun. 21 2009 11:14 PM ET

A Canadian journalist has been detained in Iran, as authorities extended their crackdown on those protesting last week's disputed election to include those covering the demonstrations.

Newsweek magazine said in a statement its correspondent Maziar Bahari, a Canadian citizen, was detained Sunday morning and has not been heard from since.

The magazine defended its coverage as "fair and nuanced" and is calling for his release. More than 20 journalists have been detained in Iran over the last week.

The Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs says the Canadian embassy in Tehran will be demanding immediate consular access to Bahari.

Bahari came to Canada from Iran in 1988 as a political refugee. He has made a number of documentary films, several of them about Iran.

Iranian state television has raised the death toll from anti-government demonstrations to at least 17 and reported Sunday that the daughter of former president Hashemi Rafsanjani, along with four other family members, has been arrested for participating in the protests.

According to the report, authorities made the arrests late Saturday, but a report Sunday by the English-language Press TV said the four unidentified family members have been released.

Prior to reporting news of the arrests, state media reported early Sunday that at least 10 people died during Saturday's clashes between supporters of opposition candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi and members of the pro-government Basij militia.

In contrast Press TV put the death toll at 13, while CNN put the number at 19.

It's unclear how many have died since the protests began a week ago, with some unconfirmed estimates putting the toll as high as 150.

Prior to news of Saturday's arrests, state television had broadcast pictures of the 46-year-old Faezeh Hashemi, who is Rafsanjani's eldest daughter, speaking to supporters of opposition candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi.

Rafsanjani, 75, is a powerful man in Iran. He is head of the Assembly of Experts, which has the power to remove the country's supreme leader. He also heads the Expediency Council, which mediates disputes between parliament and the Guardian Council, the unelected body that can veto legislation.

Rafsanjani and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was declared the victor in the June 8 national elections by a landslide despite predictions of a close race against Mousavi, have traded insults in recent weeks.

But as late as Friday, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called Rafsanjani a strong and effective politician and praised him as one of the leaders of the Iranian revolution.

For more than a week now, protesters, supporters of Mousavi who allege the elections were rigged in favour of Ahmadinejad, have taken to the streets every evening since the election, clashing with militia members and riot police.

State media said that 100 people were injured on Saturday. The deputy chief of police, who was quoted in the story, said officers did not use live ammunition against the crowds who, according to the report, set fire to gas stations and attacked a military post.

The New York-based International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran said dozens of demonstrators who were brought to local hospitals for treatment were subsequently arrested by security forces.

The organization also said that doctors were under orders to tell authorities about any patients they treated who were injured during the protests.

"The arrest of citizens seeking care for wounds suffered at the hands of security forces when they attempted to exercise rights guaranteed under their own constitution and international law is deplorable," said Hadi Ghaemi, spokesperson for the campaign, denouncing the alleged arrests as "a sign of profound disrespect by the state for the well-being of its own people."

"The government of Iran should be ashamed of itself. Right now, in front of the whole world, it is showing its violent actions," he said.

Reporters arrested

Reporters Without Borders said that, over the past week, 23 journalists were arrested. On Sunday, the British Broadcasting Corporation announced that Jon Leyne, its Tehran-based correspondent, was told to leave the country.

George McLeod, a Canadian freelance journalist who is still in Tehran, said Sunday that the streets of Tehran have so far been free of protests, he expects that to change by evening.

"It's calm right now as far as I can see, but we have to remember that the protests haven't been starting until about 5 o'clock in the evening," McLeod told CTV News Channel. "That's because the demonstrators try to mix in with the rush hour traffic before coming out. So I would say this is the normal scenario we've seen before protests have broken out."

McLeod said he managed to leave his hotel for about an hour to survey the streets of Tehran since Saturday's intense fighting.

"There was an incredible amount of rioting in the south of the city (on Saturday night)," McLeod said. "I was driving around for about an hour and it was almost like a fireball had hit the streets. There was ash everywhere, traffic signs had been literally heaved out of the ground, bus shelters were smashed. And strangely, I've never seen this before, but I saw a mosque had been burned and sacked, which I find incredibly strange to have happened in Iran."

The protests have carried on despite strong warnings from Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, that the government would crack down on demonstrations.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised the courage of Iranian citizens for facing danger to bring about change.

"I think something very deep, very fundamental is going on," Netanyahu said Sunday on NBC's Meet the Press. "There's an expression of a deep desire within the people of Iran for freedom, certainly for greater freedom."

Canada denies allegations

Numerous posts on Twitter's Iranian election page say that dozens of people have been severely beaten and that foreign embassies in Tehran are taking in the wounded.

There were allegations on the web Saturday that the Canadian embassy was denying entry to injured people seeking sanctuary, but the Department of Foreign Affairs said those allegations were false.

"The Embassy was closed Saturday and there were no Canadians at the Embassy when the protests began. Reports that we were providing shelter to Iranian demonstrators are false," foreign affairs and international trade spokesperson Simone MacAndrew said in a statement to CTV.ca.

"Canada's Embassy is located in the centre of recent demonstrations. Due to the tense security in Tehran this week, the Embassy has been closing early so that staff can return home safely before the public and democratic demonstrations begin."

Foreign Affairs called the violent crackdown by authorities "wholly unacceptable."

Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff issued a statement late Saturday night saying, "Canada should join other countries in keeping our embassy open for the humanitarian needs of the people of Iran."

Foreign Affairs says that Canadian embassies do not normally offer asylum to individuals abroad but will provide temporary safe haven if there is an immediate threat or injury.

With files from The Associated Press

Comments are now closed for this story

Moe-Edmonton
said
0 0

The Iranian people should be praised for their courage. At the end of the day, only a rising up of the people can ever end tyranny. This applies to the Middle East and North Korea. No one else can do it, the people must want it and when they do...it is unstoppable. The increasing use of technology (Twitter, cellphones etc.) have actually become a tool for freedom as the true word can be spread this way. Impressive!


towlar
said
0 0

Early closing? I understand the need to protect staff, but surely one role of a Canadian embassy is to be our eyes and ears in a country, especially in a crisis, and especially if it is in the middle of the action. Seems like a moment the gov't should ask embassy staff to stay a little late.


GHW
said
0 0

It was the parents of these protesters who ushered in these religious zealots. Why would any peoples want to put a bunch of stuffy hard-ass right wing conservatives in charge of their country? They were probably expecting something different from what they got. Maybe they started out OK but like all dictatorships it’s only a matter of time before corruption sets in and you convince yourself that rigging elections is best for the people.


JP in BC , Canada
said
0 0

"Canada's Embassy is located in the centre of recent demonstrations. Due to the tense security in Tehran this week, the Embassy has been closing early so that staff can return home safely before the public and democratic demonstrations begin
CLOSE the Embassey and cut of demolatic contatc with this country-
The rulers in Iran are NO BETTER than the Talabin,
over thrown the religious nuts and all demoracey to prevail.


Jesse - BC
said
0 0

The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan both established democracies on the door step of Iran. Bush did his part. Now its time for Obama and Harper to step up. For starters why not expell the Iranian embassy staff in Canada and invite Moussavi to appoint his own ambassador (ie. formally recognize him as leading the true government of Iran).


Henry Wysmulek
said
0 0

Human oppression, whether using Religion, Economics, or Politics, always ends the same way!

Sandra
said
0 0

Iggy be quiet unless you are willing to support the protesters.
YOU HAVE MY VOTE IF I SEE YOU IN IRAN.


Nancy: They count Deaths like Reform ballots
said
0 0

If they count deaths, like they count the Reform Party ballots, the death toll is twice as high as they say.

AB
said
0 0

For me, Iranian protesters are dying for nothing. It is not a sacrifice but a suicide. They know that they don't have enough power to change the decisions of the actual government or change the actual regime. They have to stop their protests and accept their leaders' decision. That's all ! Otherwise we all know that there will be more and more killings because of few stupid internal and external agitators.


AB
said
0 0

For me, Iranian protesters are dying for nothing. It is not a sacrifice but a suicide. They know that they don't have enough power to change the decisions of the actual government or change the actual regime. They have to stop their protests and accept their leaders' decision. That's all ! Otherwise we all know that there will be more and more killings because of few stupid internal and external agitators.


Wade Ens - Ignatieff Wreckless American Ideas
said
0 0

Ignatieff said something wreckless get in the news again.
The Iran hostage crisis was a diplomatic crisis between Iran and the United States where 52 Americans were held hostage for 444 days from November 4, 1979 to January 20, 1981, after a group of Islamist students and militants took over the American embassy with the support of the Iranian government. the United States military attempted a rescue operation, Operation Eagle Claw, on April 24, 1980, which resulted in a failed mission, the crash of two aircraft and the deaths of eight American servicemen.
It is clear Ignatieff wreckless abitions and failed American ideas do not fit Canada. Canada needs to work with the world community to bring pressure for change, not pull an American stunt that get Canada dragged into another war, sheesh Iggy go back to the USA and take your books Blood and War and Blood and Belonging and a Lesser Evil Essay with you, Canada is not interested in provocating a war.


Ian K
said
0 0

I think the world - and especially the EU which has a lot of pull in Iran - must stand up and refuse to recognize the Achmadinedjad presidency and start thinking about serious action about Iran's nuclear weapons program. However the US should stay silent because if it doesn't, the Iranian dictatorship will blame the unrest on the US and use nationalist sentiment to undermine the revolt.


Josh Moosejaw, Saskatchewan
said
0 0

Ignatiff fails his first foreign policy test.
He is not even in power and is trys to get Canada into a military situation instead of risking Canadian lives he should stick to bumbling from one failed policy to the next on EI where he changes his position daily. We need an election on it, no we dont. We need a carbon tax no we dont. Isreal committed war crimes, no they didnt. I supported the Iraq war noe I dont.
Ignatieff will be against his own ideas next week.


Shamaro
said
0 0

This is very typical of an iron fisted regime, who care nothing about their own people.

It is kind of like the Sheperds turning out the wolves on their own flock of sheep.

I really pray that the people of Iran can get the reform that they fighting for. More freedom and less human indignity that the Clerics have poured out on their nation.




Roxy in Vic. Canada avoided riots with Coalition
said
0 0

This the kind of Riots we would of had Canada if the Liberals, Bloc and NDP coalition took power against the will of the Canadian people who elected Harper as PM. I voted for the Ndp but I respect the will of the people.
Harper won fair and sqaure and he deserves to serve a full term.
We have had a got rid of a corrupt government that ran elections on stolen money and many of those people who won are still members of the Liberal Party, I will always vote against corrupt organizations.


Adam & Steve- Ahmadinejad says no Gays in Iran
said
0 0

Ahmadinejad says there is no homosexuals in Iran and they are in danger now. Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff said "Canada should join other countries in keeping our embassy open for the humanitarian needs of the people of Iran."
Gay people are in extreme danger in Iran from the Khomanies and we need to provide them a safe haven in the embassy, safe passage to Canada and citizenship.
Harper is too focused on womens rights and while ignoring gays in Iran.
Mr Harper open that embassy now and back it up with the military. Ignatieff should be PM he his not afraid to use military power.



Garry in NS
said
0 0

The only ones who can solve this crisis are the people of Iran and only them. They have to take their country back without any outside interference or influence. Things will get worse before they get better.


hossein
said
0 0

The rallies shown in Iran TV that support ahmadinejad are financially supported by government. They claim that the dispute and clashes are limited to Tehran. If it is so, why they do not let independent reporters to be there and confirm they claim.


Jennifer Tanner Thunderbay, Ontario
said
0 0

The young people want santions lifted due to extreme unemployment they want jobs and peace. If Mir Hossein Mousavi is given another election it will mean peace for the middle east no more supporting terrorists such as Hezbollah and Hamas. By supporting the people who have choosen a modererate govenment and asking their votes be recognized will make the world a much safer place but
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the Supreme leader will not go without a fight. Human rights usually only come after fight for them lets hope the people have the will for a long fight.


Ben
said
0 0

This is another reminder to all the people of the world of the result of mixing power with religon. Never allow religeos hardliners to take over your country or you will end up like this.


david
said
0 0

the problem is that Irans leaders give a listening ear evil advice and silence the advice for peace. we can all see what is happening there:

the government saying it was a fair election and then they go beat those protesting as they sleep in university dorms or hold a placard on the streets. we know what is going on. What happened in the Romanian coupe was the army eventually sided with the demonstrators and they all dragged the leader to his trial and death.

The Assembly of Experts
said
0 0

This is the first I have ever heard of the Assembly of Experts, a body that has the power to remove the supreme leader. It seems to me that there may possibly be other avenues for change within Iran besides protesting and getting slaughtered in the streets for nothing.



JB in Calgary
said
0 0

@ AB

Give your head a shake. You wouldn't be able to write your very dumb comment if people never stood up to the powers that be in our history.

And now you tell them to stop? Easy for you to say when it's already been done for you. We are civilized countries with Human Rights, Charter's of Rights, Bill's of Rights, etc.

How do you think we got these Rights????

It will make a difference, the key is they can never stop until they get what they want.


Reformed Conservative
said
0 0

Wade Enns

By "wreckless" ideas, I assume you mean "reckless", that is, without consideration for consequences.

But what exactly are these "wreckless" ideas you speak of? And what do those ideas have to do with the history lesson that you posted? And what does any of this have to do with Mr. Ignatieff?

Are you acknowledging America's failed attempt in the '70's to control Iranian politics by installing a puppet regime under the Shah? What has Mr. Ignatieff said in this regard? Maybe I missed the article. Please let us know what you mean here.

As for the idea that somehow this uprising was inspired by Mr. Bush's invasion of Iraq, please remember that Iran has been a democracy since 1979, at least in the sense that they have had free elections. Iranians didn't need Iraq as a model of democracy. They already had one!

They are not rebelling to gain a democratic government- they are rebelling because their election process has been hijacked by a right-wing theocracy that refuses to compromise.

In that sense, this is a democratic revolution, one that is seeking to extend the notion of democracy by eliminating authoritarian, uncompromising rulers.

But that can hardly have been motivated by the desire to emulate George Bush's notion of democracy, now could it, given his own track record?

Nor did Mr. Bush invade Iraq or Afghanistan in order to bring democratic governments. If you'll recall, the pretext for the invasion was the hunt for "weapons of mass destruction."

It was only after those weapons were not found that the explanation changed. In fact, the real reason, the desire to control Iraq's oil, had been in the plans since 1974. Afghanistan was invaded to hunt for bin Laden.

So what does any of this have to do with either Ignatieff or Bush?


Alexis
said
0 0

The only bright side I can see in this kind of a situation is that the more ignorant people in the world can open their eyes up to the fact that no matter how much a country deserves criticism, the people with it are mostly good, mostly right, mostly the same as anyone else. Just maybe, that will help fight racial prejudice and misconceptions about those from other cultures or backgrounds.


Roby-D
said
0 0

AB- I am apauled that you would say the protesters are dying in vain. Nothing will change or get better if the young people of Iran don't march, protest, and demand it be so. It's tragic that these people have died trying to protect their homeland and stand up for their rights. I invite you to get off your high horse, get out to see the world, and maybe you will realize how incredibly lucky we are to be Canadians. Is it so wrong that these people simply want the same freedoms you take for granted?


Joan
said
0 0

Ignatieff keep quiet and stay out of it! Canadians don't need you shooting your mouth off.There is an elected Prime Minister to handle statements on behalf of the Canadian people.You will probably make things worse for the embassy and staff in Iran, so do you have to play politics right now? We all know you want to become PM but really you are becoming an embarrassment to Canadians.


Sasan
said
0 0

CTV interviewed a Canadian born documentary film maker who is authorized to work in Iran. He said upper class is protesting. Does he know Tehran, ‘Enghelab’ street is not a high class area. He sounded very much like someone who is Khameni’s or Ahmadinejad’s representative. I am appalled when he said Iranian are mostly supporting current government and western media is misleading people. I am not sure if Ramin (film maker) can even speak Farsi, the fact that he is allowed to make his film and not having the same faith as Zahra Kazemi tells me whose side he is.


JLN in Ottawa
said
0 0

Harper is too focused on womens rights? You're right, we should all take to the streets to protect Adam & Steve in their quest to be together because if those two kids can't be together forever there is no justice in this world.

No body needs to be protecting the rights of what two grown men chose to do.

Having said that, Harper is once again profoundly and humiliatingly ignorant of the facts. Women in Iran are full active members of society including higher and post secondary education, gov't posts, legal and political positions. Women in Iran are treated with more fairness and less sexism than women in Iraq and even women in North America where we're always too fat, too old and too smart.

Head covering may suck however being allowd to show your hair or ankles is not what women's rights are all about.

The Iranian people are taking the reigns of the destiny of their nation. Lets support them and lets all pay for Harper to take a trip to Iran so he can learn about the nations he flaps his Rapture gums about.


Darren
said
0 0

I see Obama is typically quiet. Such a "leader". This is what you get when you elect a community organizer with no experience.

The US, Britain, etc. should be "meddling" in this uprising as much as possible.


Elle Ameno Ottawa
said
0 0

Newsweek magazine said correspondent Maziar Bahari - a Canadian national - was detained without charge In Tehran on Sunday morning and had not been heard from since.

Is CTV going to report this, find out what if anything our Tehran embassy is doing, follow up with foreign affairs?


Paul in Brantford
said
0 0

Thank you VETERANS

We have freedom of speech and take it for granted.

Others long for all that we have.

May the people of Iran and others lands gain that right.


Call Me Shocked
said
0 0

There has to be a real question of Ignatieff's intelligence, given his statement concerning our embassy's response to current events in Iran. He obviously does not have the first clue as to the environment in Iran right now. Tension! Lots of it and he presumes to open his mouth on the issue. He's quite frightening.


Paul
said
0 0

Why are we not hearing condemnation for this behaviour against the Iranian people by any Muslim country?

Why is it only coming from the West?




Red X
said
0 0

The protesters were warned. Though it looks like Ahmadinejad will be pandering to the Neo-Cons in Iran.

I don't know why the article mentions Israel's PM, though it appears that the narrative in the Western world is making it bigger than Tehran...


Will there ever be peace in the Middle East?
said
0 0

I don't get it.
I just do not understand the Middle East culture. If you go to www.aljazeera.com and read their interpretation of the news, you'll think that this is nothing more than a minor street scuffle.



Ian K
said
0 0

Ben writes, "Never allow religeos hardliners to take over your country or you will end up like this."

It wasn't any different under secular and atheist Communism in Russia, Eastern Europe, China or anywhere else. Secularism and atheism was a foundation stone of Marxism - and yet these regimes easily match Nazism for brutality and murder.

What's happening in Iran is not the result of theocracy but is what happens when people allow their hatred for one ruler - the Shah - to blind them to the totalitarian intentions disguised as religion in a rival gang of political criminals.


Dave in Cobourg
said
0 0

to Wade Ens.
Mr Ignatiefs statement was that the embassy should be kept open to allow protesters santuary from the riots." Canada should join other countries in keeping our embassy open for the humanitarian needs of the people of Iran." So tell me, how does that in any way relate to operation Operation Eagle Claw...bla bla. bla.
During that time period, Canada actually hid some American diplomats from the Iranian authorities and I beleive successfully smuggled them to safety. Are you saying we should not, as a freedom loving nation support the people if Irans' struggled for democracy, or is this just another chance to IGGY BASH?
I'm frankly getting tired of people using every hangnail as an excuse for it.
Iran is a country that is pretty much run by a Muslim autocrat and if you don't know the meaning of the word....look it up. Democracy will ONLY come with much bloodshed in that country, and that is the shame of it. We shed ours a hundred or more years ago, as did the Americans, etc. Yes it's a shame what is happening, but it is neccessary to fight for what you believe in and want, and that is the cold hard fact. Freedom is not free!!
The media coverage brings it into our homes and makes it more 'in your face', but what is going on over there is nothing new.


Like soccer hooligans running wild in the streets
said
0 0

They just want to disrupt civil order and have fun doing it.




The rioters should respect the majority vote.
said
0 0

But they're the coddled children of the prosperous class, so they think they deserve special entitlements.




Johnny (Montreal)
said
0 0

The western world must learn to stay out of the politics of other independent states. We cannot keep trying to enforce our way of life on others. Let them go through their own evolution.

Forcing our ideals on them, if anything will cause more suffering and more hardline refusal to change.


Jason Daniel Baker, Toronto
said
0 0

Iranian hardliners like to taunt the U.S. and claim foreign manipulation is at work in all of these protests which is false.

But I think that there are questions being asked in the corridors of Western power as to how much more has to happen for military intervention if not full scale invasion to occur.

What a shame then that NATO countries and United Nations forces are committed to senseless and resource consuming wars elsewhere.


Present specific evidence of Iran election fraud
said
0 0

Yeah, I didn't think so.




Those rioters are well-dressed, obviously well-off
said
0 0

Where are the poor oppressed people of Iran?

Obviously happy with the results of exercising their franchise.




Laurel
said
0 0

I'm very concerned to hear that a Canadian journalist is being held in Iran. Remember what they did to Zahra Kazemi?


The rich people in Iran are rioting.
said
0 0

They don't like the votes of poor people being counted.




Roger Hammer
said
0 0

The New York Times had one of its reporters kidnapped by the Taliban 7 months ago. They refused to mention this in their paper for fear that it would endanger his life. This week, the fellow escaped his captors - and the NYT told the story at last.

Funny, though - they had no compunctions about printing sensitive stories over the last few years that endangered the lives of American and Nato troops on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan!

I guess it's different when your own staff is in danger, eh?


Robert McMaster
said
0 0

I think people are sick and tired of hearing problems in the middle-east. Tell me day we went w/o a problem in the middle-east?
It's an internal affair, Iranians should deal with it on their own. West isn't here to police every country in the world. 17 Iranian died today, 20000 sri lankan-tamils died last month, 100 000+ died in Africa last year. This is the world we live in, try to live a modest livelihood where everywhere you're in the world. Iran is much better place to live than Iraq, China or India in that fact,in comparison w/ human rights.


Vote NDP in the next federal/provincial election
said
0 0

More proof that Facism is alive and well in Iran. In facist nations, journalists are detained and free speech is supressed. And Iran wants to quash these things. Where's the CIA when you need them?


Chris
said
0 0

I'd be interested in seeing the IP address of "The rich people in Iran are rioting", "Those rioters are well-dressed, obviously well-off", and, "Present specific evidence of Iran election fraud". Wouldn't surprise me in the least if they came from Tehran


Jay
said
0 0

Johnny (Montreal)
Its not a matter of our way of life its a matter of human rights.


Dave
said
0 0

Tonight as North Americans prepare for bed, hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of Iranians will walk into the streets with absolutely nothing protecting them from the almost inevitable violence.

Our prayers must be with them.


Paul
said
0 0

I'm surprised at the last bunch of comments. You are making light of the significant fact that people are getting killed in the streets and all you have to say is that they are well dressed??? And you want evidence of fraud? Where are the 82% who are supporting this clown as their leader? Oh yeah, they are all hiding in the weeds with AK-47's taking potshots at young women like Neda.


Reformed Conservative
said
0 0

Uh...Darren

The reason Mr. Obama is not saying too much is that if he endorses the protests, this will be taken as evidence that the U.S. is interfering in Iranian affairs, and give support to the oppressive forces there.

So the smartest thing he can do is walk a very narrow line and be seen to support the desire for freedom, without seeming to be supporting the revolution. Tough to do, but he's doing it.

If he followed your advice, the ruling clerics would spin it to make it seem as if he were fomenting the revolution. That would lend legitimacy to the use of force.

Remember that the U.S. has a history of interfering in Iranian afairs. The last time was when they put the Shah in power, and tens of thousands of Iranians were tortured to death with the help of the C.I.A.

So if Obama came out too strongly in support, then the ruling elite could turn this into a propaganda victory.

That wouldn't be too smart on Obama's part, would it?


MM
said
0 0

I think a very good action that the Canadian government could undertake in this situation would be to : ask the current staff of Iranian embassy in Canada to leave and invite Mir-hossein mousavi to appoint his ambassador in Canada. very good idea if it can be done through legal Channels. however difficulties arise as one country embassy is like the land of that country and interfering in embassy is the same as declaring the act of war. Well the Canadian politicians are to find an answer for that obstacle.


Elle Ameno Ottawa
said
0 0

Thank you, CTV, for getting a comment/commitment from Canadian foreign affairs ... this government and this dept. don't always act or act quickly enough. Canadians need to press them to do it right and act now.


RZ
said
0 0

The US and the rest of the world should stay away from this manner and let the Iranian people take care of this themselves. After all, US intervention in that country back in 1953 deposed of its democratically elected leader Mossageh and reinstated the shah, only to experience a backlash in 1979, led by Ayatollah Khomeinei. Do we really need to repeat this ridiculous mistake?

Not to mention, would we Canadians have appreciated it if the rest of the world ganged up on us over our own political crises such as the 1995 Québec Referendum or the political showdown of Fall 2008? A bit farfetched, but you get the idea.


Roger T
said
0 0

Hence, Canadian journalist there for the reporter must have broken the laws to report on banned issues imposed by the Iranian Gov't NOT Canadian Gov't. Punish should be fit for foreign reporters entering into a country that has its own laws. Being Canadian does not make you an exception by presecutions by that country's law.

Iran's law should be respected ALL forgeign journalist.




rose
said
0 0

The Shahs ruled Iran for over 2500 years. And now after 30 years this happened . The will of the people should rule .

Take care to the people of Iran. Canadians care .


MS.Perfect
said
0 0

what is wrong with iran?!?!


Mousavi executed thousands of political prisoners
said
0 0

If you google Mousavi executions you will learn he presided over the executions of thirty thousand jailed political prisoners. It would take a George Bush to be worse than that.


It was in Time magazine.

Some of you people are such dupes.




Still waiting for that evidence.
said
0 0

Yeah, that's what I thought.




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Hundreds of Iranians living in Germany protest against the results of the Presidential elections in Iran and post election violence, in Berlin, Germany, Sunday, June 21, 2009. (AP / Markus Schreiber)

International condemnation

The international community reacts to the turmoil in Iran.

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This is a moral test for voters in the municipal election. Electing him will be a stamp of approval for his actions. I strongly believe that the first thoughts should be for the person he has publicly humiliated, his partner. By his conduct he has made of himself, merely, a footnote in the election.

Allan McLay

Giambrone drops out of T.O. mayor race, post scandal