Thousands gather to hear, cheer Iran's Michelle Obama
Tehran (Iran), May 25 (ANI): There are some in Iran who are hoping that Zahra Rahnavard, the wife of presidential hopeful Mir Hossein Mousavi, will become Iran's Michelle Obama.
Though dancing in public is not allowed in Iran, but thousands could hardly contain themselves at a recent presidential campaign rally in Tehran.
According to a CNN report, the deafening cheers were not for Mousavi, but for his wife.
The comparisons with Obama stem from the role Rahnavard is playing in her husband's quest for the presidency.
Never in the history of Iranian presidential elections has a candidate put his wife in the forefront of his campaign.
Wherever Mousavi-a centrist candidate-goes, Rahnavard is usually nearby.
"We look at her and we say, 'we want to be like her in the future, ' " said Shakiba Shakerhosseie, one of 12,000 people who packed into Tehran's indoor Azadi (Freedom) sports stadium to hear Rahnavard speak.
Iran became an Islamic republic in 1979 after the ruling monarchy was overthrown and Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was forced into exile.
The revolution also ended the ceremonial role of first lady that the last queen, Farah, enjoyed.
At this rally, Rahnavard-a writer and art professor-spoke for her husband, who was campaigning elsewhere.
Wearing a floral headscarf and a traditional black chador-a full-length loose robe that women in Iran wear like a cloak-Rahnavard called for freedoms she says were lost during President Mahmoud Ahmadijenad's term.
"I hope freedom of speech, freedom of the pen and freedom of thought will not be forgotten," she said.he crowd, which was clad in Mousavi's trademark color green, cheered wildly. It waved placards with his picture and swayed from side to side, chanting and beating drums.
The women sat on one side; the men on the other.
The overwhelming majority were young voters, many of whom said they attended because of Mousavi's wife, a mother of three.
Iran's population-estimated at more than 66 million-has a median age of 27.
Mousavi, a former prime minister, is considered a threat to Ahmadinejad, a hard-liner, in the June 12 elections. He is credited for successfully navigating the Iranian economy during a bloody eight-year war with Iraq in the 1980s.
Over the weekend, the Iranian government blocked access to the social networking site Facebook, where Mousavi has a page with more than 5,000 supporters, the semi-official Iranian Labor News Agency (ILNA) said.
Those attempting to visit Facebook received a message in Farsi saying, "Access to this site is not possible." (ANI)
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