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Iran's fourth largest city spends quiet election day

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  • Iran's fourth largest city spends quiet election day

    Iran Focus, Iran
    June 24 2005

    Iran's fourth largest city spends quiet election day
    Fri. 24 Jun 2005

    Iran Focus

    Tabriz, Iran, Jun. 24 - Polling stations across this north-western
    metropolis and capital of Iran's East Azerbaijan Province remained
    quiet throughout the day, as the local population by and large
    ignored the second round of presidential elections in Iran.

    A tour of the city at different times of the day between 9 am and 4
    pm showed that there were only a handful of voters in most centres,
    with the security forces often outnumbering the voters. In one of the
    city's main thoroughfares, Abressan Avenue, two polling centres had
    no one turning up to vote between 10 am and 2 pm.

    In Imam Sadegh Mosque, Hannaneh Primary School, Dehkhoda School, and
    Masjede Ghariblar, all in downtown Tabriz, the number of voters at
    any given time varied between one and four.

    The only polling station with a large crowd was Salar-e Shahidan
    Mosque, the gathering point for members of Ansar-e Hezbollah, the
    state-organized gangs of Islamic vigilantes.

    In Taleghani Street, Shahidi Mosque and Imamzadeh Mosque there were a
    handful of voters in the afternoon.

    The polling station at Shahnaz Intersection, a district populated by
    ethnic Armenians, was completely deserted.

    People walking in the streets or sitting in cafes and restaurants
    smiled and congratulated one another on the evident victory of
    boycott calls. Some joked that the state radio and television would
    be announcing an extension of voting deadline to deal with `the huge
    turnout'.

    Observers believe that if the voting pattern in other cities were
    broadly similar to what has been going on in Tabriz, Tehran's mayor
    would stand a better chance than former President Hashemi Rafsanjani.
    While the vast majority of ordinary voters have stayed away from the
    polls, the small minority who support the radical clerics have come
    out to vote for their favourite candidate, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
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