Just because Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is certifying the election, it doesn't mean the opposition is accepting those results. Mousavi as well as fellow opposition candidate Mehdi Karoubi are both rejecting the legitimacy of the government and promoting a peaceful transition. The Guardian:
Mousavi's language seemed chosen to suggest that the Islamic regime, which in the last two weeks has seen the worst unrest in 30 years, was betraying the basic principles of the 1979 revolution.
"It is our historical responsibility to continue our protests and not to abandon our efforts to preserve the nation's rights," insisted the former prime minister.
"From now on we will have a government which from the point of view of ties with the public is in the weakest of positions. A majority of society, of which I personally am a member, do not accept the legitimacy of this government."
Mousavi also demanded an end to the regime's "obsession" with security, the reform of electoral laws he believes were abused, the constitutional right to free political assembly, an end to restrictions on the media, and the right to set up independent television stations.






