Iran seldom admits the international media. It makes an exception at election times because it wants the world to see the Islamic republic's glorious democracy in action. Thus some 400 foreign journalists and television crews were given ten-day visas to cover Friday's presidential election, and for a week we really did see a vibrant and impressive democratic process.
Admittedly the four candidates were handpicked by the regime, but they ranged from the liberal to ultra-conservative, offered starkly contrasting visions for the future and engaged in remarkably outspoken TV debates. The people responded. Armies of supporters took over the streets, festooned every square with posters and banners and, on election day itself, flocked to the polling stations in numbers that shamed most Western democracies. More...
See also:
- Who won the elections in Iran?
- Violent clashes in Tehran (BBC video)
- Unrest in Tehran as Ahmadinejad is declared election winner...
- Iran blocks Facebook to stifle opposition...
- Iran: the friendliest people in the world...
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