No decent human being would ever report your question in a time like this. I only hope that Yahoo doesn't delete it either. I'm not sure if it makes a difference or not in whether questions get deleted, but I will star your question just in case.
I also don't know if it makes any difference (considering IP addresses and all that), but if you need a profile from outside of Iran then email me and I will make one for you and send the name and password to you.
We don't know much here in the U.S. as you probably know. Just what is in the internet news.
Best wishes to all of you. I wish that I could help.
Edit: Yes, I came back because I had thought of something, but I see that Samy has already posted what worried me below in a way. It seems that the Iranian government is cracking down on independent media and is forcing all foreign journalists to leave...to me that seems to indicate that there may be a major crackdown or even more violence directed against you once there is no one there to see. So, please be careful.
Edit: Cannot reply to email from Iran through YA. Is returned and says "cannot be delivered".
So, here is some news..both old and new. I'm sure you already know some of it because it says that it was announced on your state television. I don't know if this investigation of the election will be real or not. Good luck.
Iran's supreme leader ordered Monday an investigation into allegations of election fraud.
Protesters set fires and battled anti-riot police, including a clash overnight at Tehran University after 3,000 students gathered to oppose the election results.
One of Mousavi's Web sites said a student protester was killed early Monday during clashes with plainclothes hard-liners in Shiraz, southern Iran.
A top Mousavi aide, Ali Reza Adeli, told The Associated Press that a rally planned for later Monday was delayed. Iran's Interior Ministry rejected a request from Mousavi to hold the rally.
Overnight, police and hard-line militia stormed the campus at the city's biggest university.
3,000 students at dormitories of Tehran University started with students chanting "Death to the dictator." But it quickly erupted into clashes as students threw rocks and Molotov cocktails at police.
Hard-line militia volunteers loyal to the Revolutionary Guard stormed the dormitories, ransacking student rooms and smashing computers and furniture with axes and wooden sticks.
Before leaving around 4 a.m., the police took away memory cards and computer software material, Akbar said, adding that dozens of students were arrested.
Mousavi has also threatened to hold a sit-in protest at the mausoleum of the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, founder of the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Such an act would place authorities in a difficult spot: embarrassed by a demonstration at the sprawling shrine south of Tehran, but possibly unwilling to risk clashes at the hallowed site.
U.N., U.S., U.K., E.U., France, Germany and others have "noted irregularities in the voting in Iran" such as the president's high percentage of votes from city voters which were not considered to be his base and at least 10 million votes which were missing national identification numbers (the equivilent of an identifying social security number) and are therefore untraceable...although they are essentially powerless to do anything about it.
Ahmadinejad has cancelled a planned trip to Russia according to the Russian foreign ministry.
On Saturday, Iranian officials contacted television journalists for The Associated Press in Iran and warned that the government would enforce an existing law banning provision of news video to the Farsi-language services of the BBC and the Voice of America. Both agencies broadcast to Iranians via satellite in their own language.
There were a variety of other clamp-down steps affecting both international and domestic news organizations. For instance, officials telephoned several visiting international journalists with visas to cover the elections and told them that their visas would not be extended after the vote, a courtesy often offered in the past.
A spokesman for the Swedish network SVT, Geronimo Akerlund, said its reporter, Lena Pettersson, had been asked to "leave Iran as soon as possible because the elections are over."
Dubai-based news network Al Arabiya said the station's correspondent in Tehran was given a verbal order from Iranian authorities that its office would be closed for one week, said Executive News Editor Nabil Khatib. No reason was given, but the station was warned several times Saturday that it needed to be careful in reporting "chaos" accurately, he said.
A newspaper started by the main reformist candidate, Mir Hossein Mousavi, did not appear on newsstands Sunday. An editor, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation, said the paper, called Kalemeh Sabz or the Green Word, never left the printing house because authorities were upset with Mousavi's statements after the elections.
Iran restored cell phone service Sunday that had been down in the capital since Saturday. But Iranians still could not send text messages from their mobile phones, and the government increased its Internet filtering in an apparent attempt to undercut opposition voices. Social networking sites including Facebook and Twitter were also not working.
The British Broadcasting Co. said that electronic jamming of its news report, which it said began on election day Friday, had worsened by Sunday, causing service disruptions for BBC viewers and listeners in Iran, the Middle East and Europe. It said it had traced the jamming of the satellite signal broadcasting its Farsi-language service to a spot inside Iran.
Iran's powerful 12-member Guardians Council said today it would rule on the candidates' complaints within 10 days, providing a breathing space for the embattled regime.
With the chairman of the Guardians Council openly backing Mr Ahmadinejad before the election, the chances that it will overturn the result are thought to be remote.