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Thursday
Aug042011

Iran Interview: Ahmadinejad on Mousavi and Karroubi "There are Prisons in Every Country"

Euronews has posted an extract from an interview with President Ahmadinejad on the fate of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, the possibility of a similar uprising in Iran, and the strict house arrests of opposition figures Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi:

Ahmadinejad: We should express our sadness that some leaders have such a bad relationship with their people that they end up at this point. I voice my disappointment over the global management which separates some governments from their people to the point that the people, for the sake of reaching a degree of freedom, have to ask for the trial of their leaders.

Euronews: You say that all people have the right to challenge their government and we saw it here in Iran two years ago in 2009. Do you think that what we’ve seen elsewhere in the Middle East might happen in Iran too, or are you confident that everything is stable here?

Ahmadinejad: What happened in Iran is not the same as what’s going on in certain other countries. A totally free election was held in Iran...but attacking buildings and cars is forbidden in any country and of course that is what the police as well as the judiciary are concerned with preventing.

Euronews: “Is there freedom for Mir Hossein Mousavi who is under house arrest? Is there freedom for Mehdi Karroubi who is also under house arrest? Do they have the freedom to express their opposition by which it’s evident they are opposed to you, but do they have the freedom to do that from their prison cell or from their guarded house?

Ahmadinejad: There are prisons in every country. Don’t they have prisons in England?

Euronews: I appreciate that Mr President, but I’m talking about prisons and jails in this country, where Mr Karroubi and Mousavi are staying.

Ahmadinejad: There are prisons everywhere. They have problems with the judiciary. The judiciary in Iran acts independently and I don’t have the right to interfere in the judicial affairs. There are rules under which people can interact with the judiciary.

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