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Iran announces more protester arrests

Foreign minister says he doesn't think the U.S. or Israel is in a position to provoke war.

By Jim Heintz
Associated Press
IDIEPOP

Mousavi


NEW YORK Iran on Thursday announced more arrests in the post-election turmoil, detaining seven alleged provocateurs of violence who it says were linked to Iranian exiles. The move underlines authorities' drive to portray protests as the work of outsiders rather than a reflection of widespread popular dismay.

The arrests continue a heavy crackdown that has squashed the mass protests that erupted over the disputed June 12 presidential vote. Iran's top police chief has said 20 people were killed in violence during the protests, and that 1,032 people were detained.

In another move to push the government's depiction of the protests, the semi-official Fars news agency reported Thursday that families of the “innocent victims” of bloodshed during demonstrations would receive government compensation. Fars said “terrorists infiltrated among protesters to foment unrest,” causing the violence.

There was no word on who would receive compensation and how much – but it appeared to refer to eight members of the basij militia who were reportedly killed.

The compensation is to come from the state-funded Martyrs' Foundation, a body that helps families of those who died in the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war, in which more than a million people from the two countries were killed and far more wounded. Providing funds to dead basijis would raise them to the same level of national heroism as the war dead.

Iran has been eager to depict the unprecedented wave of protests as inspired by outsiders, apparently looking to boost the legitimacy of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was announced as a landslide victor over his pro-reform opponent Mir Hossein Mousavi. Mousavi insists he is the winner, calling the official results fraudulent.

Meanwhile, the official tally of deaths among Iranian protesters during the street demonstrations following the vote was upped from 17 to 20, police Chief Gen. Ismail Ahmadi Moghaddam announced, according to the state-run newspaper Iran.

Police detained 1,032 people, and most have been released, said Ahmadi Moghaddam, adding that 500 police forces were injured in the clashes. He did not specify whether the numbers included those detained by the Basij, who are connected to Iran's elite Revolutionary Guard, not the police.

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