Conservative rival seeks trials for Iran bloodshed

? Criticism of Iran’s mass prosecution of political activists widened Sunday with the main conservative challenger to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad demanding authorities also seek punishment for those accused of killing protesters.

The sharp rebuke by Mohsen Rezaei — on the eve of Ahmadinejad’s scheduled inauguration for a second term — also showed the broad scope of opposition to the crackdowns after the disputed June 12 elections.

Conservatives such as Rezaei have increasingly joined ranks with liberal factions to denounce the harsh tactics by Iran’s leadership including sweeping arrests, media blackouts and attacks blamed for at least 30 deaths.

But Rezaei brings added weight as a former commander of the powerful Revolutionary Guard — which has led the backlash against groups claiming widespread fraud paved the way for Ahmadinejad’s re-election.

In a letter to the head of Iran’s judiciary, which is directly controlled by the ruling clerics, Rezaei said trials must be held for anyone linked to deadly attacks on the streets or torture of detainees. Among the dead is the son of one of Rezaei’s top aides.

“Otherwise, justice will not be realized and it is possible that unrest will not end,” said Rezaei, according to a report posted on his Web site.

The turmoil has complicated President Barack Obama’s efforts to step up diplomatic engagement with Iran.

The trials of political activists began Saturday in the Revolutionary Court system, first used to sentence officials of the Western-backed monarchy that was toppled by the 1979 Islamic Revolutionary.

The more than 100 defendants spanned nearly a dozen years of efforts to challenge Iran’s Islamic systems: from supporters of opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi to several top allies of former President Mohammad Khatami, who began the openings for greater political and social freedoms with his election in 1997.

The blanket trial — on broad charges of trying to bring down the nation’s political order — appeared part of an attempt by authorities to rattle and discredit the core of the reform movement in one blow.

Officials claim the opposition was a tool of foreign countries aiming to topple the Islamic state. State media quoted Mohammad Ali Abtahi, who served as Khatami’s vice president, as “confessing” to working to foment unrest.

But rights groups have said such confessions are often obtained under duress in Iran. The trial was closed to all but state media.

Khatami called it a show trial to deflect attention from the “real crimes” carried out by authorities following the election.

The former president, who held office from 1997 to 2005 and is Mousavi’s close ally, criticized the court for not allowing defense lawyers access to the courtroom or the case files.