Protesters in about 80 cities around the world
have called on Iran to end its crackdown on opposition activists, demanding the
release of hundreds of Iranians rounded up during demonstrations over the
country's disputed election last month. A crowd, estimated at several thousand
by organizers, marched from Times Square to the United Nations headquarters.
Saturday's global protests stretched from Tokyo to Seattle to Caracas. The
massive, coordinated rallies were organized by United for Iran, a coalition of
individuals and human rights groups, including Amnesty International, Human
Rights Watch, and the Nobel Women's Initiative.
The protest in New York brought together former political prisoners and other
Iranians in exile with residents from around New York and the rest of the United
States.

Despite their diverse backgrounds,
protesters - many dressed in green to show solidarity with Iran's opposition
movement - voiced a common theme of solidarity with the people of Iran.
Protesters also condemned Iran's crackdown on political demonstrations and the
country's restrictions on civil liberties.
Padini Hajarin moved to the United States from Iran three years ago. She says
she thinks such public demonstration will help turn international attention to
the situation in her home country. "I think all of Iranians should be together
and this way they can show the other people that we are together and support the
people that are in prison in Iran and all the people that are killed. This way
we can show the Americans and especially the United Nations to do some for
Iran," Hajarin said.
Human rights groups believe hundreds of people have been arrested for taking to
streets following Iran's presidential election on June 12, when President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad claimed a landslide re-election victory.

Protesters in Syracuse
One reformist Web site on Saturday
said one of the protesters in custody in Iran has died. He was said to be the
son of an advisor to another defeated presidential candidate, Mohsen Rezaie.
The organizers of Saturday's rallies want the United Nations to investigate
allegations of torture and abuse in Iran's prisons.
"We need people throughout the world to, one, recognize their struggle, know
what they are doing and to support them. And , I think just that, for the
Iranian people, is huge. Because just the knowledge that what you are doing
isn't in vain, because its being noticed," said one protester.