In an article entitled "Hesitation not allowed," in its daily column "Day’s note," the newspaper wrote on Thursday: "22nd of Khordad (June 12, the day of mullahs’ sham presidential election) in fact was a pretext for enemies to settle accounts with the revolution and the pillars of the system… If in the first days of the conspiracy, the claims about fraud [in the election] and slogan of "Where is my vote?!" took some people to the streets, the curtains gradually went up and the issue changed and the slogans against the pillars of the system and the principles of the revolution replaced them."
In an article entitled "Hesitation not allowed," in its daily column "Day’s note," the newspaper wrote on Thursday: "22nd of Khordad (June 12, the day of mullahs’ sham presidential election) in fact was a pretext for enemies to settle accounts with the revolution and the pillars of the system… If in the first days of the conspiracy, the claims about fraud [in the election] and slogan of "Where is my vote?!" took some people to the streets, the curtains gradually went up and the issue changed and the slogans against the pillars of the system and the principles of the revolution replaced them."
Kayhan added: "(They) are from the same counter-revolutionary groups that always existed during the past 30 years of the revolution and the [Islamic] state. There is no political system without opposition… Today the enemy has targeted the core of the power, the central point of the guidance of the system and the leadership of the revolution."
The daily described the current situation as "gloomy" and full of "conspiracies” and called on the clerical authorities to stop the uprisings by more suppression without any "neglect or hesitation."
Photo: Anti-regime protest in Tehran, Dec. 7, 2009