Attacks Halt Iran Dissident Cleric's Memorial Service

Iranian opposition leader Mir Hossein Musavi (left) attends the funeral procession of Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri in the holy city of Qom.

TEHRAN (Reuters) -- Opponents of Iran's most senior dissident cleric, Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, stopped his memorial service in a tumultuous day in Qom today that saw huge protests and some shots fired, websites said.

The car of Iranian opposition leader Mir Hossein Musavi was attacked by "plainclothes men" on motorbikes as he was returning to Tehran from the service in Qom and one member of his entourage was injured, one of the websites said.

The incidents came after huge crowds of Iranians marked Montazeri's funeral in the holy city, 125 kilometers south of Tehran. Websites reported scuffles between mourners and police, with one saying warning shots were fired.

"Around 2,000 of Montazeri's opponents arrived at Azam Mosque and halted his memorial service. The assailants tore placards," the conservative "Ayande" website said, referring to a prominent Qom mosque.

As a result, "his memorial service was cancelled halfway through," "Ayande" said, adding that security forces "did not take measures to prevent the assailants' act of sabotage."

Montazeri, who died on December 19 aged 87, was an architect of the 1979 revolution that overthrew the U.S.-backed shah and was once named to succeed Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini as supreme leader of the Islamic republic. But Montazeri fell from grace after criticizing the mass execution of prisoners.

An outspoken critic of Khomeini's successor as supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Montazeri was viewed as the spiritual patron of the pro-reform opposition movement that led the big protests following June's disputed presidential polls.

Despite dozens of arrests and security crackdowns, the protests have repeatedly flared up.

The reports from Qom could not be verified independently because foreign media were banned from reporting directly on protests and were told not to travel to Qom for Montazeri's funeral, which took place earlier today.

A reformist website, "Kaleme," said Musavi's car was attacked while he was returning to Tehran from the funeral and the car's back window was smashed in the attack.

"On the way back from Qom to Tehran before noon...a group of plainclothes men riding motorcycles attacked the car carrying Musavi, as a consequence of which one member of Musavi's entourage was injured," "Kaleme" said.

"One of the assailants shattered the back window of the car carrying Musavi," "Kaleme" said, adding that one of the attackers was also injured in the incident.

Clashes Near Montazeri's House


Earlier, violence flared when security forces around Montazeri's house clashed with stone-throwing protesters, the reformist website "Norooz" said. There was no official comment.

The moderate "Parlemannews" website cited "information received" of shots fired in the air near Qom's main shrine and also of the use of tear gas, without giving details.

Pictures obtained by Reuters showed scuffles apparently between government and opposition supporters.

The reformist website "Jaras" said hundreds of thousands of people joined a procession for Montazeri.

"Innocent Montazeri, your path will be continued even if the dictator should rain bullets on our heads," the crowd chanted.

The "Ayande" website estimated the number of people attending the funeral ceremony at tens of thousands.

Iran's internal unrest, highlighted by Montazeri's arguments that the leadership had lost its legitimacy, has complicated the dispute over the Iranian nuclear program, which the West believes may have military ends, not just civilian purposes.

Opposition leaders Musavi and Mehdi Karrubi were photographed paying their condolences at Montazeri's house. Reformist websites said security forces arrested some opposition supporters trying to reach Qom and turned others away.

The cleric's death occurred in the tense run-up to Ashura, a politically laden Shi'ite religious commemoration that offers the opposition another opportunity to show its strength.

Shouts of "Oh Hossein, Mir Hossein" also rose from mourners near Iran's second-holiest shrine, many wearing green wristbands to show support for Musavi.

Their cries echoed traditional Ashura laments for Hossein, a grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, killed in a seventh-century battle that sealed the schism between Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims.

Ashura, a key occasion in the Islamic republic's calendar, will coincide with the seventh day of mourning for Montazeri, making it harder for authorities to keep people off the streets.

Barbed Condolences

Mourners carried pictures of Montazeri and of another Qom-based dissident cleric, Grand Ayatollah Yusuf Sanei.

Supreme Leader Khamenei expressed condolences, but asked God to forgive Montazeri over a "difficult and critical test" that he faced towards the end of Khomeini's life -- making clear that he believed his old rival had failed the test.

Iranian newspapers published no pictures of Montazeri on their front pages, in line with what reformist websites said were orders from the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance.

Khomeini's grandson, Hassan Khomeini, a cleric, paid tribute to a man who had "spent many years of his honorable life...advancing the high goals of Islam and the Islamic revolution."

Human rights activist and Nobel Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi called Montazeri "the father of human rights in Iran."

President Mahmud Ahmadinejad's reelection in a June vote that losing candidates Musavi and Karrubi said was rigged kindled the biggest unrest in the Islamic republic's 30-year history and split the political and clerical establishment.