By Edward Yeranian, VOA,
Cairo
Photos by Mehdi Ghasemi and Amir Pourmand, ISNA
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Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani delivers his sermon during Friday
prayers at Tehran University in the Iranian capital, 17 Jul 2009 |
Former Iranian President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani delivered a blistering
Friday prayer sermon at Tehran University, before a crowd of thousands, warning
those in high places to abide by the will of the people and to heal the wounds
of the recent crisis.

Thousands of people chanted as they listened to former Iranian President Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani deliver his much-anticipated Friday prayer sermon, and key
figures of the opposition movement, including defeated presidential candidate
Mir Hossein Mousavi and former President Mohammed Khatami, attended in a
calculated show of force.
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Presidential candidates attended the Friday Prayers

Mir Hossein Mousavi (sitting center left in blue shirt)

Mehdi Karrubi (sitting on the left - with turban)

Mohsen Rezaei (standing on the left) |
Former President Rafsanjani delivered a scathing attack against those in power,
arguing that "if the people are not content with the government, it loses its
legitimacy." He said this was the "way of the Imam, [Islamic Republic founder
Ayatollah Khomeini]" and also the "way of the Prophet [Mohammed]."
The former president also peppered his sermon with anecdotes of his years
alongside the founder of Iran's Islamic Republic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
noting that the Ayatollah withdrew his support for (former Prime Minister Mehdi)
Bazargan, after he had lost the support of the people.

In a clear allusion to the incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, former
president Rafsanjani argued that the Prophet (Mohammed) warned one of his
followers that "if the people aren't happy with you, then you cannot rule over
them."
He stressed "The people are the backbone of the Islamic Republic," and he
said,"we have an Islamic system, but we are above all a republic, which rests on
the will of the people, and all of our officials are elected by the people."

The former president insisted that the only way out of the current crisis, which
began with the disputed June 12 presidential election, was for "everyone to
follow the law, including the president, the parliament and [the other] branches
of the [republic]."
Only Iranian radio broadcast Friday's prayer sermon, however, in an apparent
display of hostility by the pro-Ahmadinejad faction which controls Iranian TV.

Iranian TV, instead, focused on a speech by embattled President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad in the city of Mashhad, Thursday, in which he launched his usual
attacks against the West.
Al Arabiya TV reported that those in charge of the official Iranian Broadcasting
Corporation (IRIB) had been warned at the beginning of the week "not to televise
the Rafsanjani sermon," and also "not to film the crowds in attendance."

The former president Rafsanjani also lashed out at the Iranian media for being
biased in its coverage and insisted that the official government TV must "be a
place where the people can debate their ideas," demanding that its airwaves be
opened to everyone.
In the sermon, the appeal for a free media was followed by an appeal for the
release of all prisoners who are now being held by the government in the wake of
weeks of unrest following the disputed presidential election.

Former Iranian President Abolhassan Bani Sadr, who lives in exile in Paris,
however, thinks that Rafsandjani's remarks reveal that he has submitted to the
will of Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei:
He says that Rafsanjani did what was expected of him, since he's a man of the
regime. He's submitted to the will of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and will accept
Mr. Ahmedinejad as president. In exchange, Rafsanjani didn't ask for much, he
complains: the freeing of prisoners, compensation for those who were killed, and
a small measure of free speech. It remains to be seen, he argues, if Mousavi
accepts the deal, and if he does, then, this part of the saga is over. But, he
notes, the people of Tehran are still chanting "down with the dictator," and
they don't accept the proposal; they want their freedom.
Eyewitnesses say tens of thousands of supporters of Mr. Mousavi demonstrated in
parts of the Iranian capital, after Friday prayers.