Eight Die in Vote Result Disputes in South Iran
Reuters
Sunday, February 22, 2004; 6:58 AM
TEHRAN (Reuters) - Eight people have died in clashes with
police in two towns in southern Iran over disputed
parliamentary election results, local officials said on Sunday.
Four died in the town of Firouzabad in the southern Fars
province, in protests on Saturday when the governor's office
declared an unexpectedly high turnout in a tight race between a
reformist and an Islamic conservative candidate.
"People were calling for the votes to be recounted to stop
any possibility of vote-rigging," a local official, who
declined to be named, told Reuters.
Another four were killed in the southwestern Khuzestan
province when police clashed with a group of people protesting
about election results in the town of Izeh, the ISNA students
news agency reported, citing an unnamed local official.
The protesters had tried to storm the governor's office and
attacked government and judiciary buildings in the town, the
official said.
In Firouzabad, a crowd of several hundred people grew angry
after one protester was shot and wounded by police.
The protesters began damaging police cars and attacking
government buildings and in subsequent clashes "unfortunately
three civilians and one policeman were killed on Saturday
morning," the local official said.
Islamic conservatives were on course for a big win over
reformist allies of President Mohammad Khatami on Sunday in an
election branded unfair by Washington due to the prior
disqualification of more than 2,000 reformist candidates.
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