Background to the protests The office of the President in Iran is considered the second most powerful position in the country, after that of the
Supreme Leader, as the President is the head of the executive branch of power. Since 2005, Iran was led by conservative Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who first served as mayor of Tehran before being elected as president. Ahmadinejad's name was associated with human rights violations in the country, particularly with the use of violence. The list of these violations included the increased number of death penalties and problems with LGBT rights. According to Human Rights Watch, "basic human rights protection in Iran has deteriorated to new lows" under Ahmadinejad's first presidency as, for example, the number of executions increased by three times. The Iranian president has no power over the judiciary, as it is headed by the chief justice who is in turn appointed by the Supreme Leader. Issues with human rights and other problems, such as the alleged voting fraud, led Ahmadinejad's popularity to decline. This was especially the case in urban areas, including the country's capital Tehran, and among the youth, according to
The Guardian. In 2009, the Iranian government held a regular presidential election. Former Prime Minister Mir-Hossein Mousavi was the most popular candidate opposing Ahmadinejad. The election took place on 12 June 2009 but the disagreement between the government and the opposition over the results of the election quickly caused a significant controversy. Ahmadinejad was considered to be winning in a landslide victory, but Mousavi and his supporters believed the results were fraudulent. They suggested that the Interior Minister Sadegh Mahsouli, an ally of Ahmadinejad, had interfered with the election and distorted the votes to keep Ahmadinejad in power. Mousavi claimed the victory and called for his supporters to celebrate it. At the same time, the office of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad almost immediately announced that the sitting president had won the election as he had received approximately two-thirds of votes. It sparked the 2009–2010 Iranian election protests, which were organized mostly by Mousavi's supporters and were directed against Ahmadinejad and the government in general.
Protests Clashes broke out between police and groups protesting the election results from early morning on Saturday onward. At the beginning, the protests were considered peaceful. However, as time passed, they became increasingly violent. In a stand-off that later took place in north Tehran between supporters of Ahmadinejad and Mousavi, an angry crowd of citizens broke into shops, started fires, and tore down signs. Civil unrest took place as riot police on motorbikes used batons to disperse Mousavi supporters who staged a sit-in near the interior ministry, where the results were announced. Up to 2,000 Mousavi supporters erected barricades of burning tyres and chanted "Mousavi take back our vote!". The demonstrations grew bigger and more heated than the
1999 student protests.
Al Jazeera English described the 13 June situation as the "biggest unrest since the 1979 revolution." It also reported that protests seemed spontaneous without any formal organization. Two hundred people protested outside Iran's embassy in London on 13 June.
Ynet has stated that "tens of thousands" protested on 13 June. Mousavi urged for calm and asked that his supporters refrain from acts of violence. That day, protests had been organized in front of the Iranian
embassies in Turkey, United Arab Emirates, Germany, Italy, Australia, Austria In response to the reformist protests, tens of thousands of people rallied in Tehran on 14 June to support the victory of Ahmadinejad. On 15 June, Mousavi rallied, with a number of his supporters ranging anywhere from hundreds of thousands to three million, Competing rallies for Mousavi and for Ahmadinejad took place on 16 June. The pro-Ahmadinejad protesters, chanting the phrases "
Death to America!" and "
Death to Israel!", outnumbered their opponents, but they did not match the numbers of opponents who had protested the day before. Reports from the state media and elsewhere stated on 16 June that seven people have died in all of the protests so far. However,
Times Online quoted a Rasoul Akram Hospital nurse that day who asserted that 28 people have suffered from "bullet wounds" and eight have died so far. Over half a million reformist Iranians marched silently from Haft-e-Tir Square to Vali Asr Square on 17 June. Huffington Post reported that day that 32 people had died protesting so far.
Government actions Arrests On the weekend of 13 and 14 June, the government arrested over 170 people in a series of raids across
Tehran. Among them were prominent reformist politicians, including
Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution Organization (MIRO) founder
Behzad Nabavi,
Islamic Iran Participation Front (IIPF) leader
Mohsen Mirdamadi, and former president
Mohammad Khatami's brother
Mohammad-Reza Khatami, who was later released. Also arrested were
Mostafa Tajzadeh and
Mohsen Aminzadeh, whom the
IRNA said were involved in orchestrating protests on 13 June. Iranian journalist Mashallah Shamsolvaezin claimed that presidential candidate
Mir-Hossein Mousavi was put under house arrest, although officials denied this. An estimated 200 people were detained after clashes with students at
Tehran University, although many were later released. Acting Police Chief
Ahmad-Reza Radan stated via the state press service on the 14th that "in the interrogation of related rebels, we will try to find the link between the plotters and foreign media". A judiciary spokesman said they had not been arrested but that they were summoned, "warned not to increase tension," and later released. Intelligence minister
Gholam Hossein Mohseni-Ejehei linked some arrests to terrorism supported from outside Iran, stating that "more than 20 explosive consignments were discovered". On 16 June, Reuters reported that former vice-president
Mohammad-Ali Abtahi and former presidential advisor
Saeed Hajjarian had been arrested. Human rights lawyer
Abdolfattah Soltani, who had been demanding a recount of all votes, was also arrested on the Tuesday according to
Shirin Ebadi, who said that security officials had posed as clients. Over 100 students were arrested after security forces fired tear gas at protesters at
Shiraz University on the same day. He was held overnight in
Evin Prison before being released and returning to hospital, where according to
Human Rights Watch he remained under guard. In
Tabriz, other Freedom Movement activists and eight members of the IIPF were arrested, with reports of at least 100 civic figures' arrests. In
Isfahan Province, prosecutor-general Mohammadreza Habibi warned that dissidents could face execution under Islamic law. In 2011, Mir Hossein Mousavi and his wife and Mehdi Karroubi were placed under house arrest by the government. During his election campaigns in 2013 and 2017, then-presidential candidate
Hassan Rouhani pledged to release them if he were to be elected as president, but the opposition leaders remain under house arrest to this day. ==Where is my vote?==