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Iran’s victims: how you are helping

Simon Jeffery on the response to our call for help in naming those who have died or been jailed since the Iran elections

Hundreds – maybe thousands – of people have been jailed in Iran for their part in the protests that followed the presidential election, and we are trying to find out who they are.

Yesterday we asked readers and a wider community on Twitter for help in filling in the missing details on our list and sending in photographs of the dead or detained.

So far we have received hundreds of pieces of information, many new names and several photographs. Below is Mohammadreza Jalaeipour, 27, an Oxford PhD student and spokesman for a grassroots campaign group for the reformist presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi. He was arrested at Tehran airport on 17 June as he attempted to leave the country.

Others have pointed us to Facebook profiles and photographs for those involved in the protests. If you know of these people or have them in your networks please let us know. This is an attempt to break through the crackdown on dissent and reporting in Iran since the election. Many of the names would be unknown were it not the for the work of groups such as the New York-based Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, Reporters Without Borders/Reporters Sans Frontieres and Human Rights Watch who we owe a great debt to.

All the information and photographs now coming in will be assessed and added to our database as appropriate and the main graphic will be updated. We are also sharing information with the above-mentioned Human Rights Watch and making a spreadsheet available at Datablog.

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EU envoys may leave Iran in protest

European Union members are threatening the collective withdrawal of their ambassadors from Iran to secure the release of the British embassy employees being held by the authorities.

EU diplomats said tonight all the envoys could be recalled “temporarily” in solidarity with staff from the British mission in Tehran who have been accused – entirely falsely, UK officials insist – of involvement in protests over the “stolen” presidential election.

Five of the nine Iranians, who were arrested on Saturday, were freed today, but four others, understood to be the most senior, were still being questioned. None of them have been named.

As the row with Britain continued, Iran’s guardian council, the country’s top legislative body, confirmed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s victory in the disputed poll after a partial recount, finally dashing hopes of a different outcome.

Gordon Brown underlined concern over the embassy incident when he called it unacceptable and unjustifiable that the employees were being held. The prime minister was speaking in London alongside the European commission president, José Manuel Barroso, who expressed full solidarity with the UK.

Yesterday, EU foreign ministers warned Iran that any “harassment or intimidation” of embassy staff would be met with a “strong and collective” response. Most of the 27 EU member states have their own ambassadors in Tehran.

Silvio Berlusconi, who will next week host a meeting of the G8 rich nations said todaythat they would discuss sanctions against Iran. Asked about sanctions, he replied that Iran “will be the first issue we will deal with”.

Diplomats said it had not been agreed when the EU envoys would be recalled, or for how long. But the threat is clearly intended to signal seriousness of intent to the Tehran authorities in the hope they will back down.

Iran’s foreign ministry had earlier appeared to respond to the warning by saying it did not wish to damage or downgrade relations with the UK, after a telephone conversation yesterday between David Miliband, the foreign secretary, and his Iranian counterpart, Manuchehr Mottaki. Miliband had demanded the immediate release of the embassy staff.

But the fear in London is that the foreign ministry is not in control, with regime hardliners from the interior ministry and intelligence service calling the shots as part of a campaign to pin the blame for the unrest on foreign governments.

Last week, as the trouble continued, Iran expelled two British diplomats – the embassy’s second and third secretaries – in protest at what it called their undiplomatic approach. That prompted the expulsion of two diplomats from Iran’s London embassy.

The guardian council’s recount of 10% of votes has always been treated with scepticism by opposition supporters and foreign observers. Mir Hossein Mousavi, who says he beat Ahmadinejad, demanded an annulment of the 63%-34% result, which he says was rigged.

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EU envoys may leave Iran in protest

Guardian Council rules official election results were correct after partial recount

European Union states are considering recalling their ambassadors from Iran in an attempt to secure the release of the British embassy employees being held in Tehran.

EU diplomats said the envoys could be recalled temporarily in solidarity with locally engaged staff from the British mission in Tehran who have been accused of involvement in post-election rioting. The British government insists the accusations are false.

Nine people were arrested on Saturday. Five were freed today but four others understood to be the most senior were still being held and questioned. Gordon Brown said it was “unacceptable” and “unjustifiable” that the local employees were being held.

The prime minister was speaking at a press conference with the European commission president, José Manuel Barroso, who expressed his “full solidarity” with the UK. Yesterday, EU foreign ministers warned Iran that “harassment or intimidation” of embassy staff would be met with a “strong and collective” response. Most of the 27 EU member states have ambassadors in Tehran.

Meanwhile, Iranian officials have declared the official presidential election results, which saw the incumbent hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad win by a landslide, to be correct after a partial recount.

“The secretary of the Guardian Council in a letter to the interior minister announced the final decision of the Council … and declares the approval of the accuracy of the results of … the presidential election,” according to reports in the state TV broadcaster.

Requests for a new election and allegations of voting irregularities have been rejected.

Diplomats said it had not yet been agreed when the EU envoys would leave or for how long. But the news was clearly intended to signal seriousness of intent to Iranian government in the hope it would back down.

Iran’s foreign ministry had earlier appeared to respond to the warning by saying it did not wish to damage or downgrade relations with the UK, after a telephone conversation today between David Miliband, the foreign secretary, and his Iranian counterpart, Manouchehr Mottaki.

The fear in London is that the Iranian foreign ministry is not in control of the situation, with hardliners from the interior ministry and intelligence service calling the shots as part of a campaign to pin the blame for the unrest on foreign governments.

Last week, as protests continued over the “stolen” election, Iran expelled two British diplomats – the embassy’s second and third secretaries – in protest at their “undiplomatic” approach.

The two have arrived back in Britain, the foreign office confirmed, and the families of British embassy staff have also left Iran. In retaliation, Britain expelled two diplomats from the Iranian embassy in London.

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Iran orders inquiry into protest death

Iranian president calls for investigation into killing of Neda Agha Soltan, who has become symbol of country’s opposition movement

The Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, today ordered an investigation into the killing of Neda Agha Soltan, who has become a symbol of the protest movement after a video of her dying moments was circulated on the internet.

In a letter to the head of the country’s judiciary, Ahmadinejad partly acknowledged public outrage at her death by describing it as a “heartfelt event”.

The president – whose disputed re-election on 12 June led to demonstrations in Tehran – suggested that Soltan’s death was “suspicious”, despite eyewitness accounts that she was shot by riot police on motorcycles during a violent crackdown on opposition protests.

“Neda Agha Soltan was shot dead in one of Tehran’s streets on 20 June by unknown elements in a completely suspicious way,” he said.

He also accused the foreign media of using the case for propaganda purposes “to distort the pure and clean image of the Islamic Republic in the world”.

The Iranian authorities attempted to blame the death of the 26-year-old philosophy student on terrorists, outsiders and even the BBC, with a number of conspiracy theories put forward in the state-run media.

But many observers view the investigation ordered by Ahmadinejad as a tacit admission that these theories have convinced nobody.

His letter said: “I request you to order the judicial system to seriously follow up the murder case … and identify elements behind the case and inform the people of the result.”

Soltan was shot on 20 June, a day after Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had threatened protesters with “consequences” if they continued to take to the streets.

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Iran frees UK embassy employees

Four still held for ‘interrogation’, says Iranian foreign ministry, amid claims of involvement in post-election unrest

Downing Street today condemned the continued detention of four Iranians employed by the country’s British embassy , as a partial recount of disputed presidential poll got under way.

Nine embassy staff were arrested on Saturday accused of playing a significant role in the protests. Five have since been released, while the other four are “being interrogated”, according Hassan Qashqavi, an Iranian foreign ministry spokesman.

Gordon Brown’s spokesman said: “We are deeply concerned at their arrest and their continued detention. These arrests are completely unacceptable and unjustifiable.”

Yesterday, the Iranian intelligence minister, Gholam Hossein Mohseini Ejehi, said Tehran had video proof that Iranian employees at the embassy “were distinctly present at the scene of clashes” following the 12 June election.

“The embassy sent its local staff to rallies and inculcated ideas into the protesters and the society,” he said.

Speaking last night, the foreign secretary, David Miliband, said some of the nine employees detained had been released.

He denied any had played a role in the clashes between security forces and demonstrators.

“We have protested in strong terms, directly to the Iranian authorities, about the arrests,” he said.

“The idea that the British embassy is somehow behind the demonstrations and protests that have been taking place in Tehran … is wholly without foundation.”

The EU demanded that all the detained embassy employees be freed.

The escalation followed attacks on Britain by the Iranian authorities and media, who have singled out the UK for allegedly fomenting trouble. The British embassy is in a compound behind walls three metres high on Ferdowsi Avenue in central Tehran. It has at least 70 local employees.

Harassment by Iranian security forces is common but arrests are not.

Last week, as protests continued over the election, Iran expelled two British diplomats, prompting the tit-for-tat expulsion of two diplomats from Iran’s London embassy. The families of British embassy staff have left Iran.

Iran’s powerful guardian council began the partial election recount today but has offered to recount only 10% of the votes.

It has dismissed claims of large-scale vote rigging and refused to annul the result, which saw the incumbent president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, returned to power.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader, denounced “interfering statements” by western officials and appealed to both sides in the dispute “not to stoke the emotions of the young”.

But Ali Akbar Rafsanjani, his rival and a former president, demanded a “fair and thorough” review of complaints about the election, in which Ahmadinejad was declared to have won 63% of the vote.

Rafsanjani is backing the reformist candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, who claims he was the winner.

On his website, Mousavi said he was not dropping his challenge despite pressure from Iran’s ruling clergy.

He has rejected a partial recount, and his supporters defied riot police and militiamen to hold a mourning rally outside a mosque in the capital, Tehran.

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Iran warned over embassy arrests

David Miliband demanded last night that British embassy staff arrested in Tehran be released as the EU warned of a “strong and collective response” to the latest spat between Iran and the west over post-election unrest.

The foreign secretary denied that the employees, all Iranians, had played a “significant role” in clashes between security forces and demonstrators complaining about the “theft” of the presidential poll.

“We have protested in strong terms, directly to the Iranian authorities, about the arrests,” Miliband said. “The idea that the British embassy is somehow behind the demonstrations and protests that have been taking place in Tehran … is wholly without foundation.”

Miliband said nine unnamed embassy employees were arrested on Saturday, and four had subsequently been released. The EU demanded yesterday that they all be freed. The staff include a highly regarded political adviser whose job is to keep colleagues abreast of the Islamic republic’s internal politics. Unlike British nationals, they do not enjoy diplomatic immunity.

Iranian leaders kept up their own angry exchanges over the crisis. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader, denounced “interfering statements” by western officials and appealed to both sides in the dispute “not to stoke the emotions of the young”.

But Ali Akbar Rafsanjani, his rival and a former president, demanded a “fair and thorough” review of complaints about the election, in which incumbent hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was declared the winner with 63% of the vote.

Khamenei and the guardian council – Iran’s top legislative body – have ruled out significant revisions of the result, banking on repression to quell protests in which at least 20 people have been killed. Rafsanjani is backing Mir Hossein Mousavi, who claims he was the winner.

Mousavi said on his website he was not dropping his challenge despite pressure from Iran’s ruling clergy. He has rejected a partial recount. Mousavi supporters defied riot police and basij militiamen to hold a mourning rally outside a Tehran mosque.

The EU’s support for Britain over the embassy arrests raised the stakes as the regime continued to pin the blame for the unrest on foreign meddling. “Harassment and intimidation would meet a strong and collective EU response,” foreign ministers said in Corfu.

“Obviously the regime is trying to preserve its position by very harsh repression,” said Carl Bildt, Sweden’s foreign minister, whose country takes over the EU’s rotating presidency on 1 July. “But that cannot hide the fact that this is a weakened regime. It has lost legitimacy both internally and externally.”

The latest escalation follows daily attacks on Britain by the Iranian authorities and media, who have singled it out for allegedly fomenting trouble.

The British embassy is in a compound behind 10ft walls on Ferdowsi avenue in central Tehran. It has at least 70 local employees. Harassment by Iranian security forces is common but arrests are not.

Last week, as protests continued over the election, Iran expelled two British diplomats – the embassy’s second and third secretaries. That prompted the tit-for-tat expulsion of two diplomats from Iran’s London embassy. The families of British embassy staff have left Iran.

Iran’s foreign minister, Manouchehr Mottaki, has warned that Tehran is considering downgrading ties with Britain. The intelligence minister, Gholamhossein Mosheni-Ejei, said some people with British passports were involved in violence and had joined crowds in the city to stir up unrest.

The Greek-British journalist and Guardian contributor Iason Athanasiadis, also known as Jason Fowden, has been detained. The BBC correspondent Jon Leyne was expelled last week.

On Friday a senior cleric, Ahmed Khatami, lashed out at Britain in a televised sermon. “In this unrest, Britons have behaved very mischievously and it is fair to add the slogan of ‘down with England’ to the slogan of ‘down with USA,’” he said. He also called for the execution of what he called “rioters’ leaders”. The previous week Khamenei had criticised Britain as the “most evil” country.

Iranian-British relations have been dogged by mutual suspicion and resentment for decades but they have deteriorated since the war in Iraq and Ahmadinejad’s presidency. Iran’s nuclear ambitions and support for Hezbollah and Hamas have kept the regime at odds with Britain, the US and other western countries as well as Israel.

January’s launch of BBC Persian TV infuriated the Iranians, whose harassment then forced the closure of the British Council offices in Tehran.

Parviz Sarvari, an MP, told the Fars news agency on Saturday: “The nation’s tolerance for Britain’s hidden policy of interference is over. There would be a crushing response … Unfortunately, Britain is continuing its espionage-centred and deceitful approach.”

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Britain demands releaseof Iran embassy staff

Foreign secretary calls detention of Tehran officials for alleged role in post-election unrest ‘unacceptable harassment’

David Miliband, the foreign secretary, has angrily refuted allegations that Iranian employees of the British embassy in Tehran played a role in the post-election protests of the past two weeks.

In the latest in a series of spats between the two countries, Iran detained several local embassy staff for playing a “significant role” in the unrest, which has seen serious clashes between demonstrators and security forces.

Miliband, speaking from a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Corfu, said the government was “deeply concerned” at the arrests. “This is harassment and intimidation of a kind that is quite unacceptable,” he said. “We want to see them released unharmed.”

EU foreign ministers later issued a joint statement calling on Iran to release the embassy staff, and warning that “harassment or intimidation” would be met with a “strong and collective” response.

Miliband said he believed nine local staff had been detained, although four had since been released. “We have protested in strong terms, directly to the Iranian authorities, about the arrests that took place yesterday.

“All European countries have made clear that they want to stand together in standing up for the diplomatic principles that are important for our diplomatic activity all over the world.

“At the moment our top priority is the position of our locally-engaged staff who we want to see released unharmed and back to work.”

State-run Iranian TV and the semi-official Fars news agency gave only limited details of the arrests. But one report said the arrested people were members of the embassy’s political section and that one was brought back to his apartment later on Saturday as computers and documents were seized.

The Iranian staff include a highly-regarded senior politicial adviser whose job is to keep the ambassador and colleagues abreast of the Islamic republic’s complex internal politics.

“We are still concerned about a number of them who have not been released,” said Miliband. “These are hard-working diplomatic staff and the idea that the British Embassy is somehow behind the demonstrations and protests that have been taking place in Tehran in recent weeks is wholly without foundation.”

The news from Tehran came after days of attacks on Britain by the Iranian authorities and media, who have singled it out for encouraging unrest after the presidential election on 12 June, in which the incumbent, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was declared the winner.

The British embassy is in a sprawling compound behind 10ft walls on Ferdowsi Avenue in central Tehran. It has scores of local employees. Harassment or intimidation by Iranian security forces are common. Arrests are not.

Last week, as protests continued over the “stolen” election, Iran expelled two British diplomats – the embassy’s second and third secretaries – in protest at what it called their “undiplomatic” approach. That prompted the retaliatory expulsion of two diplomats from Iran’s London embassy. The families of British embassy staff have left Iran.

Iran’s foreign minister, Manouchehr Mottaki, warned that Tehran was considering downgrading ties with Britain. The intelligence minister, Gholamhossein Mosheni-Ejei, has said some people with British passports were involved in violence.

The Greek-British journalist and Guardian contributor Iason Athanasiadis, also known as Jason Fowden, has been detained. The BBC correspondent Jon Leyne was expelled last week.

The opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi alleges massive fraud in the election, saying he is the rightful winner, not Ahmadinejad.

Iranian politicians and media are continuing attacks on Britain. On Friday a senior hardline cleric, Ahmed Khatami, lashed out at Britain in a nationally televised sermon. “In this unrest, Britons have behaved very mischievously and it is fair to add the slogan of ‘down with England’ to the slogan of ‘down with USA,’” he said. Ominously, Khatami also called for the execution of what he called “rioters’ leaders”.

The previous week, the regime’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, lambasted Britain as the “most evil” country.

The MP Parviz Sarvari told Fars on Saturday: “The nation’s tolerance for Britain’s hidden policy of interference is over. There would be a crushing response. An independent and powerful country like Iran would not allow any other country to interfere in its internal affairs. Unfortunately, Britain is continuing its espionage-centred and deceitful approach.”

Iranian-British relations have long been dogged by mutual suspicions and resentment but have worsened since the war in Iraq and Ahmadinejad’s presidency. Iran’s nuclear ambitions and support for Hezbollah and Hamas have kept the regime at odds with Britain, the US and other western countries. January’s launch of BBC Persian TV infuriated the Iranians, whose harassment forced the closure of the British Council offices in Tehran.

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Engaging with the net

The Digital Britain report offers a lot to work with, says Bill Thompson.

"We live in a largely digitised country, so in one sense the Digital Britain report is an exercise in ensuring that the legal and regulatory system catches up with the lived reality for most of the UK population rather than a visionary document describing a far-distant future.

As such it is a serious attempt to ensure that government makes the best possible use of the network in serving us all, and that businesses offering access to the internet or providing services and content over the network are regulated, rewarded and cajoled as necessary to ensure that the UK does not fall even further behind the rest of the industrialised world.

READ THE DIGITAL BRITAIN REPORT

Digital Britain report(3MB)
Most computers will open PDF documents automatically, but you may need to download Adobe Acrobat Reader.

I criticised the interim report when it was published in January because it had been written behind closed doors and offered few opportunities for consultation and engagement for those outside the charmed circle of invited experts.

But it is clear that Stephen Carter and his team have listened to and taken notice of the extensive debate around their initial proposals. The result, though far from perfect, offers a good basis for work on the detail of implementation and legislation, and there are clear signs that those who want to engage will be able to do so.

There are suggestions on how to liberalise and improve access to wireless infrastructure, with potentially transformative proposals to shake up spectrum allocation to build a next generation mobile network offering 50Mpbs in cities and 5Mpbs in rural areas.

There is a confirmed commitment to delivering a universal 2Mbps (megabits per second) fixed-line broadband service to the whole country by 2012, and a six pound a year levy on existing copper telephone lines to pay for the ‘final third’ next generation coverage if the market cannot deliver. Two megabits per second is too slow for me, but universal service offers so many opportunities for engagement that it’s definitely worth having.

And there may even be ‘cultural tax relief’ for games developers and distributors, on the lines of the model that has made Canada such an attractive place for UK developers to move to.

The report comes on a day when the importance of the internet and the services it supports has been drawn to the attention of the whole world.

"Unfortunately the proposals to limit file-sharing are less well considered and seem to be hopelessly optimistic, or perhaps to betray a naivety about how the internet works. "

Bill Thompson

Bill ThompsonThe protests over the election results in Iran have depended on Facebook, YouTube and of course Twitter to get their message to the world, put pressure on their own government and organise their activities.

Just last week the French Constitutional Council of France halted the government’s plans to give a new authority the ability to cut the network access of internet users accused of copyright violations because "the internet is a component of the freedom of expression".

In the UK the Prime Minister Gordon Brown wrote in the The Times today that "a fast internet connection is now seen by most of the public as an essential service, as indispensable as electricity, gas and water."

Locking content

The view of the network as a utility and as a tool for expression is a very different one from that put forward by the dominant players in the so-called ‘content industry’.

Record companies, film studios, newspapers and the TV broadcasters have all lobbied hard for the UK government to shape its internet policy around their interests.

They want copyright laws to be strengthened so they can lock up any and all content. They want anyone who dares to challenge their business to be kicked offline, fined and locked up. They want a world in which they control what can happen.

Fortunately that pressure seems largely to have been resisted, and the real thrust of the proposals is about getting everyone online and ensuring that the network is there to be used in ways that support creative expression, new forms of industry and new models of engagement.

Funding news

The Digital Britain of the report is one in which all have access, not one where we try to preserve old industrial models.

When it comes to newspapers the report notes that ‘Digital Britain is at the beginning of a new and possibly disruptive wave of local news, generated by communities for communities using free online media’. It recognises that ‘government and business will need collaboratively to devise new ways of funding the news’ without simply promising subsidies to the existing players who have failed to adapt to the network reality and have sought protection and subsidy.

The debate about the future of public service broadcasting includes many progressive ideas, and both the decision to make Channel 4 more than just a broadcaster but turn it into ‘the open new media authority providing the seed-corn for creative innovation in the multi-media world’, and the message to the BBC that the license fee does not belong to it are all good ones.

Unfortunately the proposals to limit file-sharing are less well considered and seem to be hopelessly optimistic, or perhaps to betray a naivety about how the internet works.
Ofcom is to be asked to oversee efforts by UK ISPs to reduce what they term ‘illegal file-sharing’ by 70%, initially through notifying those accused of downloading material or revealing their names and addresses to rights holders so that they can be prosecuted.

If this doesn’t work then Ofcom may then be granted power to oblige ISPs to limit bandwidth or block specific protocols, presumably in the hope that doing this will deter or stop downloads. But this proposal ignores the fact that work is already going on to develop new file sharing technologies that are encrypted or disguise addresses more effectively. Ofcom might well hit its 70% target just because everyone moves away from BitTorrent without actually reducing the number of files shared over the net.

However the fact that the BPI boss Geoff Taylor found it necessary to accuse the government of ‘digital dithering’ for refusing to allow rights holders to have internet users cut off – the same proposals that have just been thrown out in France – is a good sign indeed.

In the end public service broadcasting and the protection of the content industries matter far less than the promotion of universal access and the creation of tools and services that encourage everyone online to demonstrate their own creative potential.

Networked world

Children watching TV

A digital Britain is not one in which we are all sitting glued to our screens watching the same sort of television programming that we could have had on a cathode-ray set in the 1970′s, downloading blockbuster movies or listening to more dull music made by rich popstars whose only real interest is their property portfolio.

It is one in which universal access allows us all to be fully-fledged citizens of a networked world that offers opportunities for creative expression and communication instead of the passive consumption of packaged content. There’s a glimpse of that world through the Digital Britain report, and it is one that those of us who already live a networked life need to clarify, share and work to build.

"

Bill Thompson is an independent journalist and regular commentator on the BBC World Service programme Digital Planet.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Associated Press Hands Local And National News Sites An Opportunity To Get Links And Traffic

The Associated Press is facing a blog firestorm after issuing take down notices to Drudge Retort for linking to and reproducing snippets of AP stories. AP is now attempting to define how their stories can be linked to and excerpted — and the response from the blogosphere appears to be to boycott the AP, i.e. [...]

Gunfire Mars Arafat Rally

GAZA CITY – At least seven people were killed and 150 were injured after
Hamas security forces opened fire yesterday as hundreds of thousands
gathered (picture) to mark the third death anniversary of Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat.

The shots brought an abrupt end to the largest public display of support
for the rival Fatah movement since Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip
in June.

Shots rang out after the crowds started chanting “Shia, Shia” – accusing
Hamas of being a proxy for Shia Iran and its ally Syria, witnesses said.

Television images showed protesters and armed men running through the
streets and opened fire at random.

The city had been filled with a sea of yellow flags, the colour of the
Fatah party that Mr Arafat had founded.

The crowds waved Palestinian flags and held portraits of the iconic leader
as Fatah party officials called for unity.

“We say to Hamas and these armed militias, stop your crimes. “These crimes
will not shake our determination,” said Mr Zakaria Al Agha, chief of Fatah
in Gaza, reading a statement from Fatah leader President Mahmoud Abbas.

Senior Fatah official Ahmed Hellis said the event had drawn up to 500,000
people.

The Hamas-run Executive Force, a paramilitary group that has policed Gaza
since taking power, was out in force and had earlier confiscated tens of
thousands of portraits of Mr Arafat and Mr Abbas.

Mr Arafat died on Nov 11, 2004, and remains a symbol of Palestinian
unity. – Agencies