Ahmadinejad calls election defeat for Iran's foes
By Fredrik Dahl and Parisa Hafezi
TEHRAN (Reuters) - President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Tuesday hailed his disputed re-election as a victory for the Iranian people and a defeat for the Islamic Republic's enemies.
The June 12 poll sparked Iran's most vigorous internal unrest since the 1979 Islamic revolution, but hardliners have regained the upper hand in the world's fifth biggest oil exporter, whose nuclear program has alarmed the West.
"This election was actually a referendum. The Iranian nation were the victors and the enemies, despite their ... plots of a soft toppling of the system, failed and couldn't reach their aims," the state IRNA news agency quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.
Iran often accuses the West of seeking to promote a "velvet revolution" to overthrow its 30-year-old Islamic system.
The body that supervised the vote ruled out any further legal appeal and said those alleging fraud should be prosecuted.
"Based on Iran's constitution, the Guardian Council is the top legislative body to review complaints over the election. The council members have unanimously approved the election result," its spokesman Abbasali Kadkhodai told a news conference.
"The case of the 10th presidential election is closed," he said, a day after the council dismissed complaints raised by two defeated candidates, Mirhossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karoubi.
Kadkhodai urged the judiciary to take legal action against those who "spread rumors about election-rigging."
A statement on Mousavi's website did not comment directly on the 12-man body's ruling, but referred to the former prime minister's letter to the Guardian Council Saturday in which he repeated his demand for the election to be annulled.
The next formal step is for Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to confirm Ahmadinejad as president. Parliament will swear him in a few weeks later.
It is not clear whether Mousavi will pursue his demand for the vote to be canceled -- and risk arrest -- or accept defeat at the hands of Ahmadinejad, who is backed by Khamenei, the elite Revolutionary Guard and his own well-placed loyalists.
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Hardline cleric Ahmad Khatami denounced anyone still opposing the Guardian Council's decision as opposing the law.
"It shows that these people do not want to move forward within legal channels and that they would like to achieve their aims by force," Fars news agency quoted him as saying.
Khatami called in a Friday prayer sermon for leading "rioters" to be punished without mercy. Continued...




