Iran Opposition Accused Of Insulting Founder

Iran's Supreme Leader has accused the opposition of breaking the law by insulting the Islamic Republic's founder, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei urged opposition leaders to identify "those behind the insult to Imam Khomeini". The remarks centre on an alleged incident last Monday during which a poster of Imam Khomeini was torn up. Opposition leaders say the alleged incident - shown on state television - has been doctored. The opposition has been refusing to endorse the result of the presidential election in June which returned President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power for a second term. They allege the poll was widely rigged. The election dispute is now radicalising both sides, says the BBC's Tehran correspondent, Jon Leyne. Ayatollah Khamenei said on Sunday: "The election is over." He said opposition leaders had been unable to "demonstrate their claim" that there had been fraud. The disputed election led to the largest street protests since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, with thousands arrested and dozens killed. Opposition supporters have been banned from demonstrating - but last Monday, when the alleged incident occurred, they used an officially sanctioned event to protest. In his remarks, broadcast on state TV on Sunday, Iran's Supreme Leader said: "Some people created riots and encouraged people to stand against the system... paving the way for our hopeless enemies to undermine the Islamic revolution." He urged opposition leaders to return to "the right path". His warning on the alleged insult to the republic's founder was echoed by a statement issued by the Revolutionary Guards. "We, as followers of Imam Khomeini, will not tolerate any shortcoming in identifying, trying and punishing those behind the insult and those who carried it out," their statement said. The two opposition leaders who have refused to accept that they lost the election, Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, said the images showing the alleged insult were fake. "I am sure the students have never gone over such boundaries, because we all know they love the imam and are prepared to sacrifice their lives for his goals," Mr Mousavi said, according to newspaper Jomhouri Eslami. Khomeini, who led the 1979 overthrow of the Shah, remains widely revered in Iran. He died 10 years later.