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Ms. Akafian the mother of Mohammadali Sasani
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

ICJ pave the way for the salvation of MEK hostages

Mahnaz Akafian has not seen her son for 34 years. Her son MohammadAli Sasani was kidnapped by the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (MEK/ MKO/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi) in 1987 when he was a soldier of the Iranian army. Mrs. Akafian expressed her hopefulness for the release of her son from the Cult of Rajavi, in the recent online conference held by Nejat Society.

“I got so glad to hear that the appeal of 42 former members of MEK filed in the national court of Iran has been received by the International Court of the Hague,” she told the audience of the conference.

Ms. Akafian the mother of Mohammadali Sasani

Ms. Akafian the mother of Mohammadali Sasani

Mrs. Akafian said: “Although the trial of Massoud and Maryam Rajavi can not compensate the damage to the health and the life of former members in those years of living under the MEK rule, it may pave the way for the salvation of our children who are still captive behind the bars of the Cult of Rajavi. This is our ultimate desire.”

Sasani’s parents are two of many parents who are awaiting the release of their loved ones from the Mujahedin Khalq. Dozens of MEK members’ families participated in the five-day online conference of Nejat Society to express their support for the appeal against the MEK leaders in the international court calling for the release of their loved ones who are taken as hostages by the group in its camp in Albania.

September 2, 2021 0 comments
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Terrorism
Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

Global Fight against Terrorism to Maintain Peace, Security

Terrorism is known as an unjustifiable phenomenon, threatening international society, so confronting such an issue will help the world get rid of the menace and guarantee a globe free from insecurity and threat.

The phenomenon has been well-known in political literature for years and has been defined differently in different situations in accordance with global conditions and countries’ interests.

Terrorism, however, has got a more sophisticated definition since 20th century. Therefore, old forms of terrorism, such as intimidation, homicide, and massacre, were added up with new types such as sabotage, kidnapping, and hijacking. In fact, terrorism translates into a political act to remove a rival aimed at political objectives.

Iran has suffered a lot from terrorism since the victory of the Islamic Revolution in 1979. Numerous Iranian people and politicians were martyred, including President Mohammad-Ali Rajai and Prime Minister Mohammad-Javad Bahonar on August 30, 1981.

An IRNA researcher interviewed Javad Rezaimanesh, a university professor and political expert, on the occasion of anniversary of a terrorist explosion at Iran’s presidential office on August 30, 1981, named Counter-Terrorism Day in Iran.

Terrorism

Rezaimanesh told IRNA on Monday that the terrorist group of Mujahedin-e-Khalq Organization (MKO) committed heinous crimes in a bid to find a way to gain influence on political and social atmosphere of the Islamic Republic of Iran from the beginning of the government; they decided to conduct sabotage in different administrative offices and destroy the capacity of the country concerning manpower and equipment, but the Iranian people became angry with the group and their terrorist attacks on officials and buildings.

So, as part of their propaganda campaign against Tehran, the enemies of the Islamic Republic resorted to different strategies, including terrorist acts, to put pressure on the country. They have even tried to use false flag operations and put the blame on Iran.

The phenomenon of terrorism can be some acts of violence, pursuing political objectives, creating terror, and threatening preemptive reactions.

It is worth mentioning that the war initiated by powers against terrorism that kills more civilians is a sort of terrorism.

Terrorism is a strategy based on knowing psychological aspects. Propaganda is one of the components of psychological strategy of terrorism and every terrorist attack is considered a prelude to defeat a regime, so real understanding of the strategy will help confront the phenomenon.

While the fight against terrorism should follow a rational order, the international community lacks a clear-cut approach in dealing with threats and violation of peace. Thus, the existing anti-terror mechanisms are not in line with other tactics to guarantee global peace.

September 2, 2021 0 comments
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Majid Hajalirezaei family
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Mother of an MEK hostage: They brainwashed my son

Azam Fadai is a heartbroken mother who has not been able to visit her son for twenty years. Her son is a member of the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi). Majid Hajalirezai, the son of Azam was a soldier of the Iranian army when he was recruited by the Cult of Rajavi.
“We were informed by the garrison commander that Majid had been disappeared two days earlier,” Azam told the audience of Nejat online conference. “After a few days Majid called us and told that he was in Baneh (a town in West of Iran), he said “Pray for me”.”

The MEK recruiters used to call the Hajalirezaiees from time to time giving them contradictory information about Majid. “Once a woman called to say that Majid was in Greece, the other time a man called and said he was in the United States,” Majid’s mother says. Finally, Majid turned out to be in the MEK’s Camp Ashraf, Iraq.

Majid Hajalirezaei family

Majid’s parents traveled to Iraq to visit their son. The visits with Majid were strictly supervised by his commanders. In their first visit Majid tried to convince his parents about the authenticity of the so-called struggle he was involved in. In their second visit Majid apparently turned sour when he saw his mother and told her: “Why do you come here every day!?”. The exhausted distressed mother slapped him in the face. “I asked him if he was really my son! Majid loved me but the MEK had brainwashed him. They stole him from me,” Azam Fadai said.
“Maryam Rajavi knows nothing of human rights,” Azam continued. “She does not realize how a mother like me has suffered during these 20 years of separation of my only son. I am fed up. I am mentally and physically sick. I take a lot of tablets every day.”

Majid’s parents and sisters still look forward to the release of their beloved Majid from the Cult of Rajavi. “It not late,” says Azam in the message to her son. “Come back home dear! We receive you whole-heartedly.”

Ramezan Hajalirezai is Majid’s father. He also addressed Nejat online conference. “We went to Iraq four times,” he said. “Every time Majid got darker than the previous time. The last time, we were not even allowed to see him. We were standing in front of the gate of Camp Liberty. MEK agents insulted us and threw rocks against us.”
About the brainwashing system of the Cult of Rajavi he said, “They brainwash people so systematically that, as a 60- to 70-year-old-man, I might be deceived by them. I hope that the hostages of the Cult of Rajavi give up some day and return to their home land. You are loved by the Iranian people. You, the beloveds who have been deceived.”

September 1, 2021 0 comments
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MEK Terrorists
Iran

Swedish Courts, Where MEK Terrorists Are Witnesses

Habilian Association that protects families of terrorism victims in Iran called for legal prosecution of crimes committed by People’s Mujahedin Organization (MEK), known as Monafiqeen (hypocrites) in Iran.

Mohammad Javad Hasheminejad, Secretary General of Habilian Association, said in an interview with IRNA that several legal entities and communities outside Iran have acknowledged the terrorist nature of crimes committed by the MEK.

However, different administrations in Iran have failed to actively prosecute and follow up the terrorist group legally and realize the rights of families of terrorism victims, according to Hasheminejad.

He also said that the fact that the US and European Union had recognized the MEK as a terrorist group for years indicated that even Western countries admitted the terrorist essence of their crimes.

Pointing to the significant number of 17,000 people martyred in terrorist attacks in Iran, the secretary general said that the new administration should take the demands of families serious.

If Iran falls short of expressing the reality of these crimes and hold the perpetrators accountable, the committers who are now protected by some governments will present a reverse narrative of the realities taken place during the past decades, he insisted.

Hasheminejad also referred to the trial of an Iranian citizen in a Swedish court, saying that such trials are aimed at putting the victim in the place of the executioner.

He noted that some people who have attended the Swedish court as witnesses were accused of crime and massacre of Iranians and Iran should hold European countries accountable in this regard.

Habilian Association is an Iranian Human Rights NGO established in 2005 with the aim of elucidating the fact that Iran is one of the biggest victims of terrorism.

September 1, 2021 0 comments
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Torture in the MEK Cult
Human Rights Abuse in the MEK

Five years in solitary confinements of MEK camps

Farhad Javaheri-Yar is a former fighter with the MKO in Iraq. He served in various capacities in intelligence and security operations. In 1995, he became aware of dissident members being imprisoned inside the MKO camps in Iraq. He wrote a letter to his superiors requesting to be released from his duties and expressed his desire to leave the organization. His superiors tried repeatedly to intimidate him into staying. After his refusal, he was incarcerated in various prisons inside the MKO camps in Iraq from November 1995 to December 2000. He was subsequently turned over to the Iraqi officials and held in Abu Ghraib prison until January 2002, when he was repatriated to Iran.

Javaheri-Yar joined the MKO in August 1982 in Tehran and became active in their underground armed resistance. He was arrested in October 1984 by the Iranian authorities and spent the following four years inside Evin, Ghazal Hisar, and Gohardasht prisons in Iran. Upon his release, he contacted MKO operatives in Europe and was smuggled to Karachi and from there to Iraq. He entered Iraq in 1989 and became an active member of the MKO’s armed wing.

Camp Ashraf

Javaheri-Yar became disillusioned with the MKO in 1995 after learning from a number of other MKO cadres that they had been recently imprisoned by the organization:

In July 1995, I returned to Camp Ashraf from a reconnaissance mission. During the preceding months, I had noticed a number of my friends had “disappeared.” I was told that they were inside Iran to carry out missions. I met two of them, Akbar Akbari and Ali Taleghani, who told me that they were imprisoned inside Camp Ashraf during this period and were forced to sign false confessions indicating their ties to Iranian intelligence agents and [promising] that they would never leave the MKO.

I could not believe that the Mojahedin would engage in acts of torture and forced confessions similar to what the Iranian government used. I wrote a number of reports for my superior. In these letters I expressed my disapproval of the mistreatment of members and submitted my resignation. My request was repeatedly ignored.

Javaheri-Yar persevered with his request to leave the MKO, but was told that the organization could not relieve him of his duties because of his extensive knowledge of MKO’s activities. Once Javaheri-Yar realized he would not be free to leave, he escaped from Camp Ashraf on November 28, 1995 and attempted to reach the Jordanian border. On November 30, 1995, he was arrested by Iraqi security forces near the city of Tikrit. He pleaded with the Iraqi forces not to return him to the MKO camp, but his pleas were ignored and he was handed over to the MKO forces in Camp Ashraf. During the next five years he was held in solitary confinement in various locations inside the MKO camps, from November 1995 to December 2000.

During the first two months, I was kept inside a pre-fabricated trailer room called a bangal. I was told that I could not leave the camp but could resume life inside the camp if I chose to do menial labor, such as making bread or sweeping streets. I refused their offer, and their response was harsh. I was moved to a prison cell in Avenue 400 of Camp Ashraf. The cell’s dimensions were three by two-and-a-half meters [nine feet by eight feet]. It was connected to a narrow hallway – one meter [three feet] wide and three-and-a-half meters [ten feet] long – that led to a small toilet and sink.

In February 1996, I made very loud verbal protests from inside my cell. To punish me, they confined me inside a bathroom for three consecutive weeks. I was miserable. There was no room to stretch or lie down. The tiled floor was wet and cold. It was a terrifying experience.

The MKO’s leadership, including Masoud Rajavi, promised Javaheri-Yar that he would be released “soon,” but each time they broke their promise. Javaheri-Yar was imprisoned in solitary confinement inside Camp Ashraf, as well as Camp Parsian, until December 2000, when he was turned over to the Iraqi intelligence forces (mukhabarat). He spent one month in a mukhabarat prison before being transferred to Abu Ghraib prison. He was repatriated to Iran on January 21, 2002. He left Iran and is living in Europe.

August 31, 2021 0 comments
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Zahra Hosseini Family
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Zahra disappeared immediately after she got married

Zahra Hosseini has been living in the camps of the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi) most of her life time. She has been behind the bars of the cult of Rajavi for 38 years.

One of Zahra’s sisters, Marzieh, took part in the last month’s on-line conference of Nejat Society and appreciated the actions taken by former members of the MEK in order to bring the Rajavis to justice in the international court of the Hague.

“My sister had a two-year-old baby who was separated from her and sent to Germany 38 years ago,” Marzieh told the audience. “The Rajavis are traitors. They did not let us visit or even call my sister.”

Zahra Hosseni

Zahra Hosseni , MEK Hostage in Albania

40 years ago, Zahra Hosseini disappeared immediately after she got married to an MEK member in Iran. Her son Saeed lives in Germany now. He is married to a German girl and has no news of his mother. When the MEK was located in Iraq, Zahra’s family traveled to Iraq several times but they were not allowed to visit her.

August 31, 2021 0 comments
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Ahmad Dehghan the brother of Mahmoud Dehghan who is at MEK Camp in Albania
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

My brother was determined to leave MEK but the group didnt give the permission

Ahmad Dehghan is the brother of Mahmoud Dehghan, a member of the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (MKO/ MEK/ PMOI/ Cult of Rajavi). Ahmad participated in the recent online conference of Nejat Society in which former members of MEK and families of those who are still captive in the MEK’s camp called on the international community for the trial of MEK leaders and the release of its brainwashed members.

“My brother was a soldier fighting for the Iranian army during the Iran-Iraq war,” Ahmad says. “There was only one month left of his service in the army when he was trapped by the MEK, in Iraq.”

Ahmad Dehghan the brother of Mahmoud Dehghan who is at MEK Camp in Albania

Ahmad Dehghan the brother of Mahmoud Dehghan who is at MEK Camp in Albania

Ahmad and his family had no news of Mahmoud until 2001 when they went to the group’s notorious Camp Ashraf in Iraq. “My parents and I went there to visit him,” he recalls. “We were permitted to be with him from noon to 7 pm. We tried to take him out of the camp and back home but the MEK leaders did not allow us.”
“My bro told us that he would get back home soon but the group never gave him the permission to leave,” Ahmad said at Nejat Conference. “They did not allow him to contact us anymore.”

Mahmoud Dehghan

Mahmoud Dehghan; MEK hostage

As a representative of his family, Ahmad declared his support for the trial of Massoud and Maryam Rajavi and other top commanders of MEK in the International Court of the Hague. “We urge the court to aid us travel to Albania in order to see my brother,” he said.

August 30, 2021 0 comments
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Terrorism
Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

Mujahedin-e Khalq Terrorist activities in Iran in 1981

Iran is marking the National Day of Fight Against Terrorism on August 29, a day on which the MKO detonated Prime Minister’s Office in Tehran, martyring President Mohammad Ali Rajai and PM Mohammad Javad Bahonar.

August 29 is commemorated in Iran as the National Day of Fight Against Terrorism.

On August 29, 1981 the Mojahedin-e-Khalq Organization (MKO) detonated a bomb at the office of Prime Minister Mohammad Javad Bahonar in Pasteur Street in downtown Tehran, martyring senior Iranian officials including the Prime Minister Bahonar, the President Mohammad Ali Rajai as well as some other officials including Tehran Police chief Hooshang Vahiddastjerdi who had a security meeting there.

This terrorist attack came nearly two months after another massive deadly bombing on 28 June 1981 known as Haft-e Tir bombing at the headquarters of Islamic Republic Party in Tehran which martyred more than seventy senior Iranian officials, including the Chief Justice of Iran Mohammad Beheshti. The MKO was blamed for the Haft-e Tir bombing as well.

Haft-e Tir bombing

the MEK bombed the headquarters of the Islamic Republic Party in 1981

Since the 1979 revolution, Iran has suffered a lot from terrorism, while the MKO has been spearheading the terrorism campaign against Iranian civilians and government officials.

According to Iranian government officials, the terrorist organization has so far killed over 17,000 Iranian citizens since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

In the early years after victory of revoltion, the newly established Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) managed dismantle the MKO internally by discovering their hideouts and sleeper cells and neutralizing them.

The notorious MKO had to flee from Iran to neighboring Iraq during Saddam Baath regime as well as European countries including France, Germany, and the United Kingdom as well as the United States and Canada.

Abbas DAvari and Baath party officials

Meeting between Abbas Davari; Head of the MKO Central Committee and officials from Saddam Hussein’s Secret Intelligence Service

Its members are now freely operating and plotting against their homeland with the backing of governments of the western countries where they are residing in with the United States and France on the top.

While in Iraq in 1980s, the MKO terrorists were armed by the former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. They fought alongside Baathist army against their fellow Iranians and their agents carried out lots of assassinations against Iranian civilians and government officials throughout the 8-year Iraqi-imposed war on Iran between 1980 and 1988.

The Baathist regime of Saddam had provided them with a camp called Camp Ashraf in Diyala Province where they were trained and plotted terror attacks against both Iraqis and their fellow Iranians.

After the Saddam regime was toppled after the US invasion in 2003, the remaining MKO members faced massive anger from many Iraqis for their previous cooperation with the former Saddam regime so that their American and European backers had to relocate them to a new camp in Albania to use them as proxies in the future against the Islamic Republic.

Subsequently, the US and the European Union gradually removed the MKO from their lists of foreign terrorist organizations despite the fact the MKO elements were walking freely in Europe and US even when the terror group’s name was still on their terror lists.

Over the recent years, the US and France have publicly shown their support for the MKO. The MKO current head Maryam Rajavi, who had taken the lead over the organization after the suspicious unannounced death of her husband, has held meetings with high-ranking US officials including former National Security Advisor John Bolton and former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. They have also held gatherings in France with high-ranking US officials in attendance.

MEK lobby

MKO Terrorist Group Hires Top US Lobbying Firm BGR

Most recently, on Sunday July 11, 2021, the MKO held a gathering at their camp in Albania with the attendance of US senators, British MPs and French lawmakers.

Western officials including Mike Pompeo and Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Jansa delivered speeches in the anti-Iranian event organized by the MKO terrorist group in Tirana.

The US and its western allies behavior towards the terrorist group is a clear example of their double standards towards terrorism.

From assassinating the second Iranian president, Mohammad Ali Rajaei, and Prime Minister Mohammad Javad Bahonar to Judiciary head Mohammad Beheshti, the MKO terrorists stand out as number one enemy of Iran.

August 30, 2021 0 comments
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weekly digest
Iran Interlink Weekly Digest

Iran Interlink Weekly Digest – 293

++ A film and article about the MEK in Albania was published by Sunday Times journalist Matthew Campbell. Twenty years ago, Campbell had links with the MEK through Hossein Abedini, in the MEK’s Public Relations department, who has since vanished from public life. For decades, the MEK wouldn’t trust journalists to visit their camps: before this the New York Times and National Geographic’s Michael Ware were the only media invited in. Certainly, nobody until now was granted an interview with Maryam Rajavi. According to internal sources, her brief appearance was strictly controlled, with Campbells’ film of the interview being checked before he left the camp to ensure he had no unwanted footage. (He is of course, invited to disavow this information.) Even so, he couldn’t disguise Rajavi’s fish-eyed appearance and wooden pose along with her out of date knowledge of Iranian civil society.

Campbell tried his best to make something positive for the MEK. Reviewing the one-sided nature of the report prompted Massoud Khodabandeh to address Campbell in the Comments saying that

“Good to see they have accepted a journalist inside at all. The picture would have been completed with more info about their time (Most of their active lives) with Saddam, fighting their own country.”

Inevitably the film couldn’t avoid showing some of the realities in the camp: the computer rooms showed that, prompted by this article, the MEK had made some effort to look more ‘normal’ (mugs on the tables, pictures of the leader on the desks instead of on the walls), but the plastic garden chairs, and unsuitable spectacles were still in evidence.

Later Ebrahim Khodabandeh, CEO of Nejat Society wrote an analysis of Campbell’s report, going into some details. Specifically, he pointed out that in this film they deny that they have daily confessional sessions. He said ‘this is where they are: forget about even talking about their missing leader Massoud Rajavi, they can’t admit to an audience of ordinary people what they are doing now on a daily basis. This is the sign of a cult. It is, of course, a welcome move that with no kids in the camp they have accepted to admit that they have universal divorces. They used to deny this. In Farsi, many commented that in parts of the film they could not avoid showing reality because it is so obvious. Even though it’s an advert they can’t hide it. Hence, the two young girls who looked like they couldn’t punch their way out of paper bag talking about the violent overthrow of the regime; the young man who couldn’t find Iran on a map, fooled into becoming the next suicide bomber; the elderly man on a mobility scooter which reminded everyone of the incontinence pad photograph.

Several people commented that this promotional film has backfired and has been a waste of Saudi money. The MEK had hoped to go on to advertise their brand on the back of this film. Instead, first they had to denounce that part of the film in which Campbell had tried to be even handed, the interview with ex-member Hassan Heyrani. They attacked the ex-members as though they had been responsible for making the film. Then they stopped talking about the film altogether. This prompted mockery as commentators suggested that Shahin Gobadi would have had to go into isolation and write a report since Maryam Rajavi would blame him for bringing the reporter in the first place: ‘Regrets, I have a few…’.

++ The court case of Hamid Nouri in Stockholm is an example of how a country’s judicial system can be compromised by bending to someone else’s agenda. The case is being covered daily by Saudi backed Iran International; BBC Farsi and every other anti-Iran outlet are also on top of it. It is a case in which the prosecutor has chosen 50 people to give evidence against the defendant – some are appointed as victims and some as witnesses. This week, Massoud Khodabandeh, Sara Zahiri, a reporter in Iran, and Peyman Aref, international law expert in Brussels. joined Vahid Farkhondeh, a journalist in Switzerland for an online programme called Kelid Vajeh to discuss this court case.

Zahiri explained the situation of the MEK from an Iranian point of view; what happened in the Forough Javidan operation in Iran and how Iranians consider the MEK, killing their own people. Farkhondeh and Aref examined details about the court itself. How, according to international law – or any law – the court must first prove that this defendant is the person they say he is, especially since pseudonyms have been used. Yet there is no proof except the witnesses. The defendant denies he is that person and says that he wasn’t where it is claimed he was at that time. Considering that this basic fact-checking has not been done, it is interesting that the prosecutor brought 50 people to testify against him. Choosing so many people to give evidence means that if the court works 3 days per week and each person takes some days to give their evidence, this court case will not take less than 3 years. This looks like a deliberate act. This becomes more suspicious since the court room is filmed without hindrance and broadcast to the anti-Iran media. It is then immediately amplified by the MEK who put their spin on events. The programme’s contributors said this is very strange and that the lawyers of this defendant should take note of these irregularities and question them.
Massoud Khodabandeh talked more about irregularities concerning the witnesses. Specifically relating to the judicial system in Sweden. He recalled that the same system went after Julian Assange on rape charges and when it became too obvious this was a ploy to get him brought to Sweden to be handed over to the Americans, they had to back off with the ridiculous excuse that the memories of the witnesses had faded. Yet in this case, the memories of fifty people are clear enough after three decades. So that they can state categorically that from behind a blindfold thirty years ago, I remembered that this is the same guy. Khodabandeh also said that ironically all these witnesses stand outside the court together, with MEK flags in their hands, declaring victory. The same flag they used to attack Iran with Saddam’s army. He also made the point that these people, however the Swedish judiciary thinks they are credible, are members of a cult, who will kill for their leader never mind lying for their leader. There are pictures of some of them getting ‘charity’ collections in the street (Iran Aid). Khodabandeh said, I cannot find a single one of them who had a proper job whether window cleaner of brain surgeon and paid a penny of tax to their country of residence. Whatever is the Swedish judicial bench mark for the credibility of witnesses, they have tried to choose people from MEK who are not widely known. If they wanted to, they could have brought 500. They have the numbers. If this is the case, am I allowed to bring 200 people to come and testify that each of these people and the prosecutor and the judge have a unicorn horn on their heads but don’t know it themselves. It is not a matter of whether this is a kangaroo court or not, the point is that it has been exposed to be a mockery of what it is. That is due to the ‘tools’ not doing what they should. The first and primary witness, Iraj Mesdaghi cannot keep his mouth shut and gives interviews boasting how ‘we’ fooled this man, set a trap to bring him to Sweden, offering a luxury yacht and five-star hotels to lure him here. In other words, entrapment. He emphasises that “we” paid for it ourselves. This begs the question, because Mesdaghi is an ex-member who never worked and who lives a fairly ordinary life, where is this money from? As is usual, each and every anti-Iran human rights activist claims that we don’t get paid by this one or that one, but that doesn’t address the question ‘where DO you get money from’. Is it possible for Mesdaghi to be a credible witness when he freely admits to having entrapped the defendant. Specifically, the way he gives evidence is interesting. He is allowed to simply talk for an hour or so without being interrupted or questioned. This is because the prosecutors want him to talk. They are giving him a platform to be filmed rather than acting as a witness. Indeed, they give him so much time that he runs out of material; once he ended up describing in detail how in the prison one of the taps wasn’t working properly and dripped. Mesdaghi is a wild card who seeks attention and fame and cannot be controlled. On the ‘other side’ of Mesdaghi is the MEK.

Khodabandeh said that according to sources inside the camp, the MEK are facing the concept that Iraj Mesdaghi has taken over from Maryam Rajavi in terms of importance and prominence. This concern is directed at the ones who are paying; Mesdaghi will get the money rather than us. Again, the payers cannot control the MEK any more than Mesdaghi. Although 50 relatively unknown people were chosen out of the 2000 members, they can’t help coming out and taking photos together under the MEK flag. They don’t care about the court case, they only want to out publicise Maryam Rajavi . When Maryam Rajavi agrees to talk with the Sunday Times journalist and approves publication of the programme it is in order to attach this interview to the court case. Two years down the line they will refer to this court case and Maryam Rajavi’s leadership and link it to president Ebrahim Raisi, saying next court case should be against him. So overwhelmed have the MEK become to get on top of this propaganda opportunity that they have had to divide their Farsi outlets to use this material – some propaganda outlets are for the MEK and some propaganda is specifically against Mesdaghi and his gang.

In the programme, the presenter Farkhondeh asked what the outcome of the court would be. Khodabandeh said that it is not about the outcome. Of course, for the defendant, it’s important, but the purpose of the court case is not the outcome but the journey. It is not about justice; it is about two or three years of anti-Iran propaganda. The conclusion is that the court case is about propaganda against Iran, which doesn’t take it seriously. The real damage is that done to the Swedish judiciary as in the Assange case. The message is that ‘Sweden is not impartial, we can bend our rules and regulations’. As a UK citizen I am unhappy that Sweden is going down this path of being used by those who have their own agenda.

Aug 28, 2021

August 30, 2021 0 comments
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Herd mentality or mob mentality within cults
Mujahedin Khalq Organization

We were completely cut off from the world

Mohammad Reza Birnazari as a native of Gorgan, in Noorshahr, worked in the organization from 1989 to 1999. This is his description of his difficult time with the Mojahedin:

“In 1989, I was 27. The war against Iraq had ended, but the situation inside Iran was bad and I was personally very unhappy. Seduced by the organization’s anti-Iranian propaganda, broadcast from Iraq, I joined the organization in order to take part in the struggle for change in Iran.

After intensive military and ideological training, I was made a member, but I quickly began to see things differently. there was a good reason for this: they kept promising us things that never happened. The leaders said: “we’ll win in a week, in a month, in a year’. But nothing happened. After five years of waiting and being obedient, I openly began to express my doubts and worries. This led to insults and threats and moral and psychological torture. I was terrified that they would actually act on the threats they made. Those who disagreed with them disappeared from one day to the next.

The peoples Mujahidin of Iran: A Struggle for what

They told us they were spies and had been handed over to the Iranian authorities or transferred to other camps, people sometimes spoke about suicides. But officially, deaths were explained as heart attacks or accidents. We had no way of verifying any of these stories, since we were completely cut off from the world. One day in 1999, to punish me, they hand me over to an Iraqi Kurd who arranged illegal border crossings. He took me into Iran via Erbil and Qasr Shirin. For me, prison in Iran was better than living in the Mojahedin camps in Iraq. The camps were places of suspicion, informants and no hope at all.
From the book: The People’s Mojahedin of Iran: A Struggle for what? “By Victor Charbonnier,2004.

August 29, 2021 0 comments
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