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Iran's leader appoints new judiciary chief: report
Sat Aug 15, 2009 9:12am EDT
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By Zahra Hosseinian and Hossein Jaseb
TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran's Supreme Leader appointed Ayatollah Sadeq Larijani as the new head of the country's judiciary on Saturday, state television reported.
Some reformist websites had recently reported that Larijani was hesitant to accept the position because of the mass arrests of moderate detainees over unrest that erupted after the country's disputed June 12 presidential election.
He will face controversy straight away -- the semi-official ISNA news agency said a new trial would start on Sunday of 25 opposition supporters detained after the election.
Larijani, a brother of parliament speaker Ali Larijani and a member of Iran's hardline constitutional watchdog the Guardian Council, replaces Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi-Shahroudi whose 10-year term has ended.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a letter to Larijani that he hoped the judiciary would flourish under him. Larijani, a cleric born in Iraq's holy Shi'ite city of Najaf, will serve a five-year term.
Iran arrested hundreds of people after the vote during the country's worst street unrest since its 1979 Islamic revolution.
After police and security forces quelled the street turmoil, the leadership put on trial more than 100 moderates, despite the damage it might inflict on the government's legitimacy and relations with the West.
"Some 25 more detainees will go on trial on Sunday," ISNA said, without naming them. They will be the third group to appear in court.
The losing candidates say 69 people were killed in unrest that erupted after the vote. The figure is more than double the official toll of 26.
OFFICIALS SACKED
Karoubi said on Sunday some protesters, both men and women, had been raped in detention. His allegation was rejected by Iranian authorities as "baseless." Karoubi insists he has evidences proving the mistreatment of detainees.
Many of the post-election detainees were held in south Tehran's Kahrizak prison, built to house people breaching vice laws. At least three people died in custody there and widespread anger erupted as reports of abuse in jail spread.
The abuse allegations, rejected also by Tehran's police chief, have created a rift among hardline politicians, many of whom backed President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election.
Ahmadinejad, who was sworn in on August 5, must name a cabinet and seek parliament's approval in what may be a stormy process.
The semi-official Mehr news agency reported 12 police officers and judges had been sacked and reported to judiciary over their involvement in mistreating detainees at Kahrizak. Continued...
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