TEHRAN,
July 11 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Street protests and
anti-clerical attacks Thursday, following the shock resignation of a
prominent scholar, plunged the Iranian regime into its deepest
political crisis since the 1979 Islamic revolution.
Ayatollah
Jalaledine Taheri, Imam (Prayer leader) of Iran's central city of
Isfahan, resigned Wednesday over the "chaotic situation" in
the country and what he said was "generalized corruption at all
levels" of religious power in Iran, reported Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
He
also expressed his firm support for dissident cleric Hossein Ali
Montazeri, the disgraced one-time successor of Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini, the late founder of the Islamic Republic.
Taheri,
who is close to reformist President Mohammad Khatami, has impeccable
revolutionary credentials.
He
was an associate of Khomeini and played a major role in mobilizing the
people of Isfahan in favor of an Islamic revolution against the Shah
and the resulting state.
His
resignation came with a fiery attack against the dominant
conservatives who accept no authority but Khamenei's and, through
control of the judiciary and other key bodies, constantly hamper the
Khatami government's attempts at reforms.
He
listed "deception, unemployment, inflation, the diabolical gap
between the rich and poor, bribery, cheating, growing drug
consumption, the incompetence of authorities and the failure of the
political structure" of the regime as reasons for stepping down.
His
letter raised an outcry among conservatives, who accused Taheri of
having written it "under the influence of suspicious
elements" in order to distract attention from the "Aghajari
affair."
Late
Wednesday, however, 125 of the 290 members of the reform-majority
parliament voiced their support for Taheri, while expressing regret at
his resignation.
"The
war has begun and it will not spare anyone, not even the clergy,"
political analyst Dariush Abdali said Thursday. He added that a
"breach" opened between the regime's main conservative and
reformist factions, reported AFP.
A
series of incidents in recent weeks increased the dissension among
conservatives and reformers, and is for the first time pulling the
nation's powerful Shiite clergy from the holy city of Qom into the
fray.
Reports
on gatherings Tuesday in Tehran and other cities by thousands of
people, families as well as militant young people, who defied a
government ban to mark the anniversary of student unrest in July 1999
continued to fill newspapers Thursday.
The
demonstrations took an anti-government turn, and ended in clashes with
the police and the arrest of more than 200 people.
However,
there were no reports Thursday morning concerning the resignation of
Taheri.
The
nation's Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) late Wednesday
barred the press from reporting "in favor of or against"
Taheri.
The
council, under the direct authority of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, is usually chaired by the head of state, moderate Khatami.
But
its secretarial board which issued the ban is headed by conservative
Hassan Rowhani.
Reformist
writer and journalist Hashem Aghajari, a member of the radical
Khatami-allied Organization of the Mujahedeen of the Islamic
Revolution (OMIR), also sparked a storm last month with an
anti-clerical speech in the western town of Hamedan.
He
was charged with offending the clergy and barred from leaving the
country after saying Muslims "should not blindly" follow
religious leaders and calling for a "religious reformation"
of Shiism.
He
was even compared to British writer Salman Rushdie, condemned to death
in February 1989 by an Iranian religious decree for publishing the
"blasphemous" novel "The Satanic Verses".
The
OMIR hit back Thursday with a fierce attack on the circle of
conservative clerics in their bastion of Qom, whose Association of
Studies runs Iran's Koranic schools.
Accusing
the association of being "at the service of the conservatives and
their mercantile capitalism," OMIR secretary Mohammad Salamati
called it a "political rival and not an acceptable religious
body."
The
association earlier alleged that the OMIR "has nothing
Islamic" to it.
"We
say aloud that we are opposed to any despotism under the veil of
religion," the OMIR said.