Thursday, 3 March 2011

Belarus jails three over election protests


Policemen arrest an activist of the Belarus youth organization Mlady Front (Young Front) during their rally in front of the government building in Minsk in December 2010. Belarus on Wednesday handed jail terms of up to four years to three activists accused of rioting offences for taking part in December's protests against the re-election of President Alexander Lukashenko.
Policemen arrest an activist of the Belarus youth organization Mlady Front (Young Front) during their rally in front of the government building in Minsk in December 2010. Belarus on Wednesday handed jail terms of up to four years to three activists accused of rioting offences for taking part in December's protests against the re-election of President Alexander Lukashenko.

AFP - Belarus on Wednesday handed jail terms of up to four years to three activists accused of rioting offences for taking part in December's protests against the re-election of President Alexander Lukashenko.

A Minsk court jailed Alexander Molchanov for three years and Dmitry Novik for three-and-a-half years, an AFP correspondent in court said.

Alexander Otroshchenkov, a spokesman of opposition candidate Andrei Sannikov, received a four-year term.

Belarus on February 17 handed out the first jail sentence to a protestor over the December demonstrations, which were followed by a crackdown on the opposition that sparked an outcry in the West.

Thousands of people took to the streets of Misnk on December 19 to protest the results of presidential polls that gave Lukashenko a crushing victory but were criticised by international observers as flawed.

But baton-wielding security forces dispersed the protestors and arrested hundreds of people, several dozen of whom are now set to stand trial for public order offences and could face lengthy jail terms.

The trials of the most prominent accused, including Sannikov himself and fellow ex-presidential candidate Vladimir Nekliayev, have yet to take place.

The opposition crackdown -- which affected a whole swathe of the country's opposition activists and media -- triggered a new crisis between the West and the president who the United States once called Europe's last dictator.

Otroshchenkov vehemently denied the charges of using violence in a bid to enter government buildings, saying in his closing arguments that "I have done none of the things of which I am accused."

Both Novik and Molchanov admitted to pushing aside a wooden barrier that had been put around the government headquarters in Minsk.

Another opposition candidate, Ales Mikhalevich, said this week was repeatedly tortured after being imprisoned along with other opposition candidates.

Unidentified people wearing masks twisted prisoners' arms in handcuffs "until the joints started to crack," he said, and forced him to stand naked against the wall with his legs stretched into a near split.

His captors also refused to allow him to speak to his lawyer alone and deprived him of sleep, he said, calling the jail run by the KGB security services "a concentration camp in central Minsk".

Mikhalevich was imprisoned in December and released by the KGB earlier this month, after he signed an agreement to cooperate with the authorities, although he is still awaiting trial.

A total of five former candidates and 37 opposition activists are due to stand trial over t

Thousands of Croatians stage anti-government protest

3 March 2011 - 00H42

A protestor holds a banner reading "Jadranka go away" demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Jadranka Kosor's cabinet in the capital Zagreb, on February 28. Several thousand anti-government protestors, mostly young people, marched through the Croatian capital on Wednesday calling on conservative Prime Minister Jadranka Kosor to step down.
A protestor holds a banner reading "Jadranka go away" demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Jadranka Kosor's cabinet in the capital Zagreb, on February 28. Several thousand anti-government protestors, mostly young people, marched through the Croatian capital on Wednesday calling on conservative Prime Minister Jadranka Kosor to step down.

AFP - Several thousand anti-government protestors, mostly young people, marched through the Croatian capital on Wednesday calling on conservative Prime Minister Jadranka Kosor to step down.

It was another in a series of anti-government protests, organised on Facebook, since late February with demonstrators accusing the government of corruption and mismanaging the economy.

The protestors initially marched through downtown Zagreb without incident, four days after violent clashes between demonstrators and police left dozens injured.

However, late Wednesday the protestors burned a flag of the European Union, which Croatia aspires to join, and a flag of the main opposition Social Democrats, commercial Nova television reported. They also tore up a flag of the ruling Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ).

"We will finish what we have started. ... The corrupt government will have to face reality," the main organiser Ivan Pernar, 25, told the protestors who initially gathered at Zagreb's central Cvjetni Trg square.

As during previous protests, the demonstrators tried to march towards the government seat where protests are banned, with hundreds of others joining them on their way, but riot police blocked them.

They then marched through the centre of Zagreb towards the seat of the HDZ.

"Citizens Hired You, Now You're Fired," read some of the banners carried by the protestors, who chanted "Come on the Streets," "We Want Elections" and "Jadranka Go Away."

Late Wednesday, some 300 demonstrators arrived in front of the building where Kosor lives, which was protected by riot police, and chanted anti-government slogans, local media reported.

On Saturday, 50 people including 32 police officers were injured in violence that erupted when several hundred people, among them football fans, clashed with riot police who prevented them from marching towards the government building.

Anti-government protests were held Wednesday in three other major Croatian towns -- Rijeka, Split and Djakovo -- gathering between 100 and 300 people in each.

Kosor took over the helm of the government in 2009 when her predecessor Ivo Sanader, currently detained on suspicion of corruption and abuse of power, suddenly stepped down.

Croatia, which aspires to become an EU member in 2012, was hard hit by the global economic crisis and has seen negative growth for the past two years.

Iran opposition: Over 200 'arrested' in Tuesday protest

Mir Hossein Mousavi (right) and Mehdi Karroubi, file pics The government has denied imprisoning Mr Karroubi and Mr Mousavi

Iran's opposition says more than 200 people were arrested on Tuesday while trying to protest in Tehran.

Opposition websites said security services rounded up protesters in several locations in the capital and were helped by police in plain clothes.

Another 40 people were said to have been detained in the city of Isfahan.

Opposition groups had called for rallies over the reported imprisonment of their leaders - Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi.

The two men had been placed under house arrest several weeks ago as authorities cracked down on protests staged in solidarity with the uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt and elsewhere.

Their families say that on Monday they were taken to prison, although the government denies this.

'Black vans'

Riot police and militia on motorcycles broke up attempts by a number of opposition supporters to protest in various parts of Tehran on Tuesday.

One website said eyewitnesses had reported 30 arrests on Felestin Street alone.

"Masked officers arrested men and women and put them into black vans and continued beating them even after they were put in the van," the Human Rights House of Iran reported.

There has been no independent confirmation of the number of arrests.

But the BBC has learned that Fakhrosadar Mohtashami, the wife of former minister Mostafa Tajzadeh, was one of those detained.

A relative told BBC Persian that Ms Mohtashami is being kept in Evin Prison and has not been allowed contact with her family for the time being.

Iranian protesters in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur rally in front of the UN Development Programme office demonstrate against the reported arrest in Iran of two opposition figures, Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, 2 March 2011 Some Iranians in Malaysia staged their own demonstration on Tuesday

No Iranian officials have acknowledged Tuesday's protests, and they were ignored by Iranian state media.

Both Mr Mousavi and Mr Karroubi ran as opposition candidates in the disputed June 2009 presidential election.

Mr Mousavi said he was the actual winner and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was only re-elected through a rigged vote.

Hundreds of thousands of opposition supporters then took part in marches that were crushed by the security forces.

Wikileaks: Suspect Bradley Manning faces 22 new charges

Bradley Manning, US military handout Intelligence analyst Bradley Manning served in Iraq

The US Army has charged a soldier held in connection with the leak of US government documents published by the Wikileaks website with 22 extra counts.

The new charges against Private First Class Bradley Manning include aiding the enemy, a capital offence, but prosecutors have said they will not seek the death penalty.

The intelligence analyst is being held at a military jail in Virginia.

He is suspected of leaking 620,000 diplomatic and military documents.

Pte Manning, who joined the US military in 2007, was initially charged in May with 12 counts of illegally downloading and sharing a secret video of a US military operation and secret military and diplomatic documents and cables.

The new charges accuse the soldier of using unauthorised software on government computers to download classified information and to make intelligence available to "the enemy".

Under the US Uniform Code of Military Justice, the offence is punishable by death.

But in a news release, the US Army said prosecutors would not seek the death penalty, although Pte Manning could face life in prison if tried and convicted.

Fresh details

Pte Manning's lawyer David Coombs said the soldier's defence team had been preparing for the possibility of additional charges over the past few weeks.

Pte Manning is being held in solitary confinement in a high-security military prison at Quantico marine base, Virginia.

Mr Coombs has said he expects a hearing to determine whether the military has enough evidence to try the soldier to be held in May or June.

The newly released list of charges offers fresh details on the records Pte Manning is accused of obtaining illegally.

Those include:

  • More than 380,000 records from a database of military records from the Iraq war
  • 90,000 records from a database of Afghan war files
  • 250,000 records from a US state department diplomatic database
  • 75 classified US state department cables, including one titled "Reykjavik-13"
  • A video file named "12 JUL 07 CZ ENGAGEMENT ZONE 30 GC"

In recent months, Wikileaks has published troves of documents it titled the Iraq War Logs, the Afghan War Diary, and reams of secret US state department cables spanning five decades.

The site has also released a cable titled Reykjavik 13 that summarised US diplomats' discussions with Icelandic officials about that country's financial troubles, and a leaked video of a 2007 helicopter attack in Iraq that killed two Reuters news service employees.

Planned Tahrir demo for allegedly assaulted US reporter sparks controversy


Wed, 02/03/2011 - 22:03
Photographed by أدهم خورشيد

Protests planned in downtown Cairo on 4 March to demand justice for Lara Logan, the CBS news correspondent who was allegedly sexually assaulted by dozens of Egyptian men in Tahrir Square the night President Hosni Mubarak resigned on 11 February, has been met with widespread opposition in Egypt.

“I could never find any kind of official [Egyptian] response about what had happened,” said Karim Mohy, a 31-year-old Egyptian-American activist organizing the protests, in a conversation with Al-Masry Al-Youm.

Logan claims she was attacked from within densely packed crowds who were celebrating Mubarak’s ouster. Despite the large numbers of cameras and media personnel in the area at the time, however, no evidence of the alleged assault has been produced.

Having spent most of his life in the state of Utah in the United States, Mohy relocated to Egypt in 2003 to attend university at the Arab Academy in Cairo and currently works as a copy editor for Anayou.com, a social networking site.

“I’d say a great deal of the world has heard about it. It happened here, and most people here don’t know anything about it,” he explained, attempting to restrain the anger in his voice.

In a plea posted on Cairo Scholars, an online listserve dedicated to helping Cairo’s expats exchange information about life in Egypt, he expressed concern that “many substantial problems [in Egypt] have not changed at all.” He expects only “a small number” of protesters to attend the demonstration.

He created an event page on Facebook called “Protest to demand justice for Lara Logan” and a group page called “Brave Hero of Egypt's Revolution: Lara Logan.” According to a detailed description of the group in both Arabic and English, the protest aims to “create awareness,” demand that “the government and military bring her attackers to justice,” and shed light on the issue of “sexual assault and sexual harassment,” which it calls “a plague on [Egyptian] society.”

Comments on the group page reflected mostly opposition to the project.

“I would love to see this group fighting [sexual] harassment and not promoting the fact the one foreigner was assaulted,” wrote one female commentator by the name of Arwa Atef Shalaby.

“We all get assaulted; it happens everywhere to all of us. No girl in Egypt or any country was not harassed by a guy. I think that’s just life, there are perverts all over the world it has nothing to do with the revolution.”

Indeed, incidents of sexual harassment and assault in Egypt have proliferated in recent years. According to studies conducted by the Egyptian Center for Women’s Right (ECWR) in 2008, 98 percent of foreign women and 83 percent of Egyptian women surveyed had experienced sexual harassment in Egypt. Meanwhile, 62 percent of Egyptian men confessed to harassing women and 53 percent of Egyptian men faulted women for "bringing it on."

More than one user cast doubt that the attack even occurred. “With all due respect, if that was true...it wouldn't have passed like this! CBS, Washington, human rights, women rights, etc. would have done something about it and making a big deal out such incident,” said Facebook user Ahmed Yaqub, apparently oblivious to the fact that Logan’s attack became an international issue following news reports by most major foreign media outlets, and that the US government had gotten involved. CBS reported on the incident, and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced soon after that US diplomats would help pursue Logan’s attackers.

“If what happened to Lara was something big enough,” wrote Ahmad Fahmy, another Facebook user, “it would have appeared in aljazeera or alarabiya.” Fahmy was at least partially correct: Al Jazeera and Al-Arabiya, two of the Arab world’s most popular TV news networks, both neglected to report the alleged incident. Al-Arabiya reported it on the English-language edition of its website ten days after the attack was said to have occurred.

Some posts denied that the protesters who called for Mubarak’s ouster during the 25 January revolution were the same people who allegedly assaulted Logan on 11 February.

“I am sure that [who] did this are the Mubarak thugs who were paid to ruin the victory,” wrote Abdallah Alkhouly in a Facebook group called “Apology to Lara Logan.”

In the same group, a user named Ahmed Tarek Osman adds: “The people who did that to you were some of the thugs who attacked us in Tahrir Square!” in reference to a group of Mubarak supporters that attacked Cairo’s pro-democracy demonstrators on 3 February.

However, Egyptians are not the only ones who oppose the idea of protests demanding justice for Logan. Judging by responses to Karim’s initiative on Cairo Scholars, it seems that many members of Egypt’s expat community reject Karim’s initiative, though for different reasons. Out of a total of nine people who responded to Karim’s message on Cairo Scholars, seven indicated their disapproval, mainly because they believed that protests should not focus on one foreigner.

“I think it would make more sense to make a sit-in against sexual harassment in general, as Egyptian women are the ones most affected by this [more] than American journalists,” wrote one woman named Simona.

One message addressed the issue of timing. “Given what else is going on… e.g., other revolutions in the region, you aren't going to get the media coverage you need to draw attention to the issue effectively right now,” wrote Kathy, who identified herself as a “community organizer” and “nonviolence trainer.”

Kathy cautioned that his efforts were likely to be “misconstrued or misrepresented in the media, especially the Egyptian media,” and she doubted whether Karim was the appropriate person to lead the protest. It would “be better if this effort were led by a respected Egyptian women's organization, like ECWR [The Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights], to avoid being misperceived as putting foreigners first, or even worse, as anti-Egyptian, anti-Egyptian revolution, or Islamophobic,” she wrote.

Another respondent named Claudia indicated that though she “mainly agreed” with Kathy’s views, she had reservations. She wondered, “Will there ever be the right person and a good time for the demands?”

Mohy, for his part, rejected the idea that such actions should be put off any longer and seemed to perceive himself as filling a desperately needed role. “The rules of Egyptian society are basically being rewritten now,” he said. “I would suggest and hope that women activists take this opportunity to do something, and strike while the iron is hot.”

For the chairman of ECWR's board, Nehad Abu al-Komsan, seizing the opportunity presented by Egypt’s revolution means working behind the scenes to ensure that women’s rights are preserved in Egypt’s new constitution. She told Al-Masry Al-Youm that though her organization welcomed the idea of protests demanding an end to sexual abuse, it opposed the idea of holding protests to specifically demand justice for Logan. A narrowly centered approach focusing on one individual is tactically unsound, she contended.

She said ECWR had not made any immediate plans to stage demonstrations of its own.

“Women’s rights are not about any one individual,” she said. “If we hold protests exclusively for Lara Logan, the government would just say ‘this is one incident; we’re sorry’ and award compensation. Case closed… We want to preserve the interests not just of Lara Logan, but of women in general.”

Live Blog - Libya March 3

By Al Jazeera Staff in on March 2nd, 2011.
An airstrike narrowly misses opposition forces - and Al Jazeera reporters - outside Brega [Picture: @evanchill]
Show oldest updates on top

As the uprising in Libya continues, we update you with the latest developments from our correspondents, news agencies and citizens across the globe. Al Jazeera is not responsible for content derived from external sites.

Timestamp:
3:47am

Evan Hill (@evanchill), Al Jazeera's online producer, was on a road near the port town of Brega earlier today when a fighter jet fired a missile that impacted metres away. The town saw intense fighting throughout Wednesday between pro- and anti-government forces. The jet was piloted by forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi. The video below was taken moments after the missile impact.

  • 3:35am

    A "distress call" from the port town of Brega, which anti-government forces defended against an attack from government troops earlier today, appears to be circulating online.

    The veracity of this report cannot be verified, but we reproduce it here verbatim. It says:

    O Almanara Media! O free men of Libya! O honourable daughters of Libya! An URGENT URGENT distress call from the city of Brega. In the city of Hrawah which is situated between Raas Lanuf and Sirt, 70 cars full of mercenaries have just arrived to support the battalion which is present there. They plan to attack the city of Brega, occupy it and control its airport. I appeal to God! Please deliver my call of distress! Please! The people of Brega are distressed and the revolutionary youth plan to resist this battalion. By God I fear there may be a massacre tonight, help us help us help us!

  • Timestamp:
    3:33am
    Some disturbing reports emerging from Tripoli, where a doctor has told Al Jazeera that government security forces have been "throwing patients from windows" into trucks at Tajura Hospital, starving prisoners to death,
    kidnapping children and detaining activists.
    According to the doctor, who spoke on condition of anonymity, a 12-year-old boy, on his way to school in a neighbourhood near Gaddafi's Bab Aziz palace, was stripped naked, searched and then kidnapped.
    Reproduced below is an excerpt from a chat conversation between the doctor in Libya (named 'Contact' in this transcript) and another London-based colleague (named 'London' in the transcript).
    Contact: how they stripped down at 12 year old going from school
    Contact: jeehit elkeyada [near where Gaddafi's residence is "bab azezeya"]
    Contact: naked
    Contact: and opened his school bag
    Contact: and then kidnapped him
    Contact: and ppl inside the houses were watching
    Contact: and could do nothing
    Contact: and tajora hospitals
    Contact: where they were throwing patients
    Contact: thrwoing patients from windows
    Contact: hit and miss
    Contact: in a big truck
    Contact: and hauled them away
    Contact: this is doctor eyewitness
    Contact: m3ash nigdir [I can't take it anymore]
    London: Throwing patients out of hospital windows
    London: Oh my god
    Contact: and how they're starving the people in jail
    Contact: so if they don't die from bullets
    Contact: they'll die from thirst
    Contact: and hunger
    Contact: nass mgawma ya [these are good people]
    Contact: hikee yideeroo feehum [how could they do this to them]
    The Libya-based doctor also told his friend about a mutual friend, a poet and activist, who was "kidnapped" by pro-Gaddafi forces, who also searched his house and took his laptop. He has not been seen since.
  • Timestamp:
    3:13am

    As the opposition vows to take the fight to Gaddafi if need be, and his forces position themselves to take on anti-government protesters, it is worth asking just what kind of military capabilities Gaddafi's troops have. Al Jazeera's Tim Friend filed this report.

  • 3:11am

    Ibrahim Dabbashi, Libya's deputy ambassador to the United Nations, reiterates to Al Jazeera the need for a no-fly zone to be established over Libya in order to protect anti-government forces. He indicates that even the "threat sometimes is enough". While welcoming possible African Union moral support on the issue, he says the AU does not likely have the "capability to impose the no-fly zone".

  • Timestamp:
    1:56am

    Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela's foreign minister, calls for the formation of a bloc of "friendly countries" to begin a process of dialogue with Gaddafi's government as well as the opposition. Once again, the South American country has alleged that the US is searching for pretexts to invade Libya to take control of its energy resources.

  • Timestamp:
    1:35am

    Clovis Maksoud, the former Arab League ambassador to the United Nations, tells Al Jazeera that the Arab League should take the lead in attempting to set up a no-fly zone over Libya.

    He also thinks the Arab League is no longer as "fragmented" as it has been in the past, and that it has taken clear action so far on the situation in Libya.

  • Timestamp:
    1:17am

    An audio update from Az Zawiyah has been posted by the Voices of Feb 17. A anti-government protester there says a burial was held on Wednesday for a man who was injured last week, but who died because sufficient medical care was not available.

    He says a pro-Gaddafi battalion has shut down the border with Tunisia, disallowing Libyans from leaving the country.

  • Timestamp:
    1:03am

    Sybella Wilkes, another spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), says there are "acres of people, as far as you can see", waiting to cross into Tunisia.

    "They are outdoors in the freezing cold, under the rain, many of them have spent three or four nights outside already," she said, appealing for "tens if not hundreds of planes" to help evacuate those fleeing the violence.

  • Timestamp:
    12:56am

    The United Nations refugee agency says over 180,000 people have reached land border crossings, with over 77,300 crossing into Egypt (most of them Egyptians) and a similar number in Tunisia. About 30,000 are still waiting at the Libya-Tunisia border, waiting to cross over.

    Camps have been set up for refugees, but are facing overwhelming numbers. Moreover, Melissa Fleming, the UN refugee agency's spokesperson, says many people are too "terrified" to move out of Tripoli, for fear that they will be targetted by Gaddafi's forces and killed.

    She also said that some Somali and Eritrean workers from Benghazi said they felt "hunted", after being mistaken for mercenaries by opposition forces.

  • Timestamp:
    12:45am

    Libya isn't the only country where it's difficult to access media that are reporting on events in the country. In Equatorial Guinea, a state radio presenter was abruptly forced off the air after he made reference to events in Libya.

    According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, Federico Abaga Ondo, the secretary of state for information and press, "stormed into the studios of government-controlled national broadcaster RTVGE and ordered producers to kill the microphone" of Juan Pedro Mendene, the presenter. Mendene has now been handed an indefinite suspension.

    Equatorial Guinea has imposed a total news blackout on events in North Africa and the Middle East.

  • Timestamp:
    12:36am

    Speaking of the opposition in Benghazi, they say they are not just calling for a no-fly zone, but for UN forces to conduct airstrikes on forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi.

    The city is tense, as volunteers continue to sign up for ad-hoc military training ahead of an expected counteroffensive.

    Al Jazeera's Hoda Abdel-Hamid filed this report from the opposition stronghold.

  • 12:32am

    Ibrahim Dabbashi, Libya's deputy ambassador to the UN, says the international body may consider setting up the much-debated no-fly zone over the country if the interim National Council formed by the opposition in Benghazi submits a formal written request for one.

    What is needed at this time is that such decision be made officially and that we, in New York, are notified of it so that we make a formal request to the United Nations."

    Timestamp:
    12:02am

    Welcome to our Libya liveblog for March 3. If you're just joining us, you can catch up with yesterday's blog, by clicking here

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Iran urged to be 'firm' with opposition chiefs

2 March 2011 - 14H49

Iranian opposition leaders Mehdi Karroubi (left) and Mir Hossein Mousavi. Iran was urged to take "firm legal action" against the opposition leaders in a parliamentary report as prosecutors denied they have been jailed.
Iranian opposition leaders Mehdi Karroubi (left) and Mir Hossein Mousavi. Iran was urged to take "firm legal action" against the opposition leaders in a parliamentary report as prosecutors denied they have been jailed.

AFP - Iran was urged to take "firm legal action" against opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi in a parliamentary report Wednesday, as prosecutors denied they have been jailed.

The demand was made by a parliamentary panel following its probe into February 14 anti-government protests called by Mousavi and Karroubi, whose families say the are being held in a Tehran jail.

But Iran denies they have been detained.

The panel's report said Western powers, including the Islamic republic's arch-foe the United States, were behind the protests.

"The intervention of embassies and their elements in the 2009 sedition and the February 14 American-Israeli and British rebellion is totally unacceptable," said the report read out in parliament on Wednesday.

"The foreign ministry is obliged to decisively confront this illegal impudence which is contrary to international regulations.

"Those like Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, who called and prepared the ground to make the nation insecure on February 14, deserve firm legal action," it added.

Family members of the two men have said on their websites that Mousavi, Karroubi and their wives had been transferred to Tehran's Heshmatiyeh jail from their residences in the Iranian capital.

Iran's prosecutor general, Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejeie, on Wednesday again rejected the reports which he had denied a day earlier.

"As I told some news agencies (Tuesday) these people are at their homes. But some communication restrictions have been implemented against them," Mohsenei Ejeie was quoted by state news agency IRNA a saying.

The chief prosecutor in the capital Tehran, Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi, too denied the accusations on Wednesday.

"There is a limit to lies, and rumours of transferring Mr Mousavi and Karroubi to a prison are a sheer lie," Dolatabadi was quoted by Mehr news agency as saying.

"Using the term house arrest is not correct. Mr Mousavi and Karroubi, along with their wives, are in their homes."

Mousavi and Karroubi, who lost to hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in the 2009 presidential election, strongly oppose his government and have since guided a string of protests against his rule.

On February 14, the two had sought to stage a rally in support of Arab uprisings, but their supporters quickly turned it into the first anti-government demonstration in a year.

The ensuing clashes between protesters and security forces left two people dead and several wounded.

Similar protests, but in scattered forms, were also carried out on February 20 and again on Tuesday, although these were largely quelled by a massive presence of security forces.

"Though some hostile websites encouraged people to come to streets, nothing special happened due to the police presence," Dolatabadi said referring to Tuesday's events.

He said police was executing its duty and had "dispersed these gatherings" Tuesday and also arrested some people while some more who participated would be pursued.

He did not specify how many arrests were made on Tuesday but said the families of the detainees were informed.

The latest demonstrations have infuriated regime-backers, with lawmakers demanding Mousavi and Karroubi be hanged.

The parliamentary report said there was a clear need for the two to be prosecuted.

"This committee based on proof and evidence sees the need for prosecution of Mr Mousavi and Karroubi and their dependants, and frankly announces that the majlis (parliament) can no longer accept any justification for not taking action" by the judiciary against them, the report said.