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Albania

Can Albania deradicalise Mojahedin Khalq Rajavi cult

Can Albania Meet its Obligations and De-radicalize an Influx of Terrorists into Europe?

Situated on the east of Europe, Albania applied for membership of the European Union in 2009. As the poorest country in Europe and designated the most corrupt, there is a lot of work to be done before this country of 3 million people is accepted into the Union. A recent visit by US Secretary of State John Kerry does indicate that this work is well underway. But Albania’s efforts to reform and strengthen its political, security, judicial and civic institutions after years of dictatorship, could be drastically undermined if the country ignores or underestimates the threat posed by the arrival of the Mojahedin Khalq (MEK) from Iraq.

Albania is the target location for the transfer of the notorious terrorist organization Mojahedin Khalq into Europe. Currently based in Iraq, the MEK is now being transferred to Albania under a deal struck with America in 2013.

Since the 1980s the MEK were paid and trained in terrorism by Saddam Hussein to effect regime change in Iran. After his ouster in 2003 the MEK aligned itself variously with the US army – during Senator Kerry’s visit to Albania, the MEK was described as “a group that has supported the US in military operations in the Middle East and in its fight against terrorism” – as well as former Saddamists headed by Ezzat Ibrahim and more recently Al Qaida insurgents and Daesh in Iraq. Each successive government of the newly sovereign Iraq tried repeatedly to evict the group from their country, but the MEK leader Massoud Rajavi – himself a fugitive from justice – ordered his followers to put up violent resistance.

Even if they would agree to go willingly, the United Nations refugee agency has struggled to find third countries to take them in. It seems that, although Western countries have benefitted openly from the MEK’s sometimes violent anti-Iran activities, and found the group particularly useful as a thorn in Iran’s side through the period of nuclear negotiations, the MEK is deemed too dirty for them to willingly host any of them even as refugees.

In an attempt to encourage other countries to take some of the MEK, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton persuaded the then Albanian Prime Minister Sali Berisha in 2013 to take just over 200 MEK members on humanitarian grounds. That process got underway, but in 2016 Albania is now expected to take up to 3,000 MEK after the President of Romania, Traian Basescu, refused to take them in 2014.

This agreement has attracted surprisingly little attention from either inside Albania or even from a world media sensitive to terrorism and organized crime. The reason is partly because the transfers are taking place in small groups of around twenty at a time in a piecemeal fashion as the UNHCR is forced to defer to Massoud Rajavi’s demands in order to circumvent threats of violence. Rajavi hand-picks the members he allows to be transferred, many using false identities. He ensures that each group of ordinary MEK members is accompanied by minders and enforcers to keep them under control and prevent them breaking loose. In order to accomplish their mandate to remove the MEK from Iraq, UN officials have had to accede to transferring the refugees under such conditions even though it reinforces the concept that the members belong to the MEK in conditions of modern slavery.

Once they arrive in Albania, the MEK leadership takes charge of the transferees. Although the US made a donation of $20 million to the UN refugee agency to help resettle the MEK, and according to a State Department official the US has provided the Albanian government with “security and economic development assistance, to help the country build up its physical capacity to house the refugees”, none of this benefits the individual refugees. In Tirana the MEK has purchased an abandoned university campus into which it has corralled the new arrivals and recreated the conditions of isolation and cultic control which have always prevailed for the membership. What started out as a humanitarian gesture has turned into the mass relocation of a terrorist group to Europe. The MEK has created a de facto enclave in Albania which is outside the law, just as they did in Iraq.

This has put the refugees out of the reach of the Albanian authorities and because they are not free to mingle with Albania’s citizenry, the influx of over a thousand trained terrorists has cleverly avoided detection and therefore controversy.

However, even though it appears that the MEK are somehow quietly contained, the citizens of Albania are entitled to ask whether the new refugees pose any actual threat to their civic life, to their security and to their ambitions to accede to membership of the European Union.

To answer this, we must ask why the Iraqi government is so desperate to expel them and why other Western countries are so extremely reluctant to accept them.

As a violent criminal organization, the MEK thrives where the rule of law is weak – in countries like Iraq and Albania which are emerging from past turmoil and troubles. In such conditions the MEK can be dangerous through criminal activity and violence.

As expert propagandists and manipulative persuaders, the MEK leaders have no problem making connections with and bribing government officials, power brokers and media types – let’s be clear, the MEK has always been well financed. Former MEK have also reported that the MEK leaders are already vigorously pursuing links with Albania’s mafia-like gangs. The MEK will work with these gangs for mutual benefit as they did with Saddam Hussein’s regime. In the long run, if the MEK organization does become established Albania – with the quiet collusion of political circles who benefit from the cult’s track record of terrorism – they will be better placed to do from Tirana what they can’t do from Paris.

The CIA characterizes Albanian corruption as a ‘transnational’ problem involving drugs, money laundering and illegal aliens. In this sense it is the very location of the country which makes it attractive to international criminal organizations and thereby creates huge problems for law enforcement agencies. Albania essentially acts as a gateway into Europe from the rest of the world.

Now, while the various routes to Turkey, Syria and Iraq are under stringent scrutiny, terrorist commanders from any mercenary group can slip beneath the radar and seek training and logistical support in Tirana. What better location to establish a clandestine terrorist training camp than in Albania? It is in Europe, but not in the EU and therefore not so open to scrutiny by the international community.

With the changed political mood following the nuclear deal between Iran and the P5+1, the MEK is looking for new friends and benefactors. The group has already aligned itself with the Syrian Free Army and has offered to help the Saudis fight against the Shias in Yemen. The MEK has over forty years of experience in terrorist activities. The real danger posed by this group is not only that they can re-arm themselves in Albania, but they can invite other groups in for training.

The worry is that the MEK has branched out and is open to do business with any terrorist group.

It is impossible to ignore the fact that MEK members are radicalized to the core. They are not ordinary refugees. Enough of them have been trained in Iraq by the former Saddam regime for terrorist activities as well as forgery, intelligence, military operations and even torture methods, to make them extremely dangerous. Above all, the nature of the MEK leadership style is cultic. This means the followers are not able to resist the orders of the leaders even if they wanted out. So there is a danger they will be used for a variety of criminal activities without their real consent. There are already examples of people trafficked by the MEK from Albania to Western Europe and used for money laundry activities in Germany.

However, the refugees could also be described as extremely vulnerable. Another reason they have not attracted attention is that the MEK can easily be dismissed as a defunct fighting force; the average age of its fighters is sixty years old and many of them are ailing with mental and physical disease after years of punishing training in the Iraqi deserts. But while this is true of the majority, there are still many among them who are expert terrorist recruiters and trainers, people who know how to train others for suicide missions; strangely transferrable skills in today’s world of global terrorism.

Not all the members who arrive in Albania do stay with the MEK. There is a growing community of formers – around two hundred to date – who have turned their back on the group and want to return to their families and to normal life. Interestingly, it is from this pool of former members that the US has carefully selected a quota of eighty individuals to be given asylum in America. They have undergone rigorous interviews to ascertain that they have completely rejected the MEK and so no longer pose any danger. Some others have been accepted by other European countries under the same conditions but the rest remain in Albania under conditions of hardship.

With the stakes set very high, Albania’s authorities will need to stop this organization from covertly establishing a terrorist base in Europe. The first step would be to remove the MEK members from the source of their radicalization. If this doesn’t happen, the problem will simply have been moved instead of being solved.

The authorities in Tirana can ensure that all the newly arrived refugees are treated as individuals, not as belongings of the MEK leader. They should be given protection and helped with accommodation and financial support as people entitled to determine their own future paths. Experience in Iraq has already shown that once these people are physically removed from the coercive atmosphere imposed by the MEK leaders and reinforced by their peers, they very quickly find that their commitment to terrorism evaporates and the de-radicalization process can begin.

De-radicalization is greatly helped when they have contact with their families. There are numerous examples of former MEK who managed to leave the cult and establish new and successful lives. Some now live in various western European countries because they have family there who have been able to help them. Some have returned to Iran – even though Iran doesn’t want them back – where they have been granted amnesty and lead normal lives under the supervision of the UN and ICRC. Some others now live in Iraqi Kurdistan and have transferred their family assets there from Iran there so they can set up in business.

Once they are out of the ‘pressure-cooker’ of the cult their lives can be sorted out through humanitarian organizations. As a Red Cross official told the authors, ‘As individuals, three thousand is nothing, we sort out millions every year. But as a group, neither us nor any other organization can deal with or help them.’ It is a choice the Albanian government cannot ignore, for to do nothing is to risk everything.

Massoud & Anne Khodabandeh

Co-authored by Anne Khodabandeh

March 3, 2016 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

PCG’s readers are ill-served on Mujahedin-e Khalq

PCG Mentioning the Mojahedin-e-Khalq

In 1994 Gerald Flurry, leader of the Philadelphia Church of God, proclaimed Iran to be the King of the South. Ever since PCG has continuously demonized Iran. But PCG has been so hostile to Iran that they have failed to alert their readers about the controversies and disturbing authoritarian behavior of one group opposed to the current governmental in Iran, namely the Mojahedin-e-Khalq.

The Mojahedin-e-Khalq (MEK) was established in Iran as a left wing party dedicated to overthrowing the Shah in 1965. But following the overthrow of the Shah and the rise of Ayatollah Khomeini to power the Mojahedin-e-Khalq, led by Masoud Rajavi and his wife Maryam Rajavi, proceeded to wage an armed insurgency against Iran from 1981 onward. According to Iran’s Press TV the Mojahedin-e-Khalq killed 12,000 people during the course of their armed insurgency to overthrow the government.

Over time the organization also became well known for authoritarian behavior imposed upon their members causing many observers to describe them as being like a cult. Noted anti-cult author Steven Hassan mentions the Mojahedin-e-Khalq on his website. According to one ex-member in 1990 Masoud Rajavi ordered MEK members to divorce their spouses.

The US State Department regarded the Mojahedin-e-Khalq as a terrorist organization from October 8, 1997 till September 28, 2012.

These unsavory facts about MEK are not to be found in PCG’s writings aside from one vague reference to them as a "radical group" dating from 2014 that does not mention any of the specific troubling facts surrounding MEK.

Below we see PCG mentioning the Mojahedin-e-Khalq. It is described as an "opposition party". In one September 13, 2008 article it is even mentioned that Iran regards MEK as a terrorist organization and it is not mentioned that at that time the US State Department also listed MEK as a terrorist organization. With just one unusual exception MEK tends to be portrayed quite favorably by PCG’s leaders.

***[..]

On September 28, 2012 US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton removed the US State Department’s designation of the Mojahedin-e-Khalq as a terrorist organization. Since then the Mojahedin-e-Khalq is no longer viewed by the US State Department in that way. But PCG has never mentioned that it was ever viewed that way by the US government in their writings. [..]

But while PCG tended to portray the Mojahedin-e-Khalq sympathetically and sometimes even as an authority that can be trusted regarding Iran’s alleged moves in August 2014 PCG’s Robert Morley mentioned MEK in an unflattering way as a "radical group" and compared them with "Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad, ISIS, Tamil Tigers [and] Babbar Khalsa". He mentioned them while scare mongering about protests in Canada concerning the war in Gaza in 2014.

 “How long before Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad, ISIS, Tamil Tigers, Babbar Khalsa, Mojahedin-e-Khalq and other radical groups’ family members introduce jihad to Canada? (Robert Morley, ‘Kill the Jews’ in Canada, August 7, 2014.)”

And so it may be seen that PCG has tended to portray the Mojahedin-e-Khalq quite favorably. PCG’s readers are ill served by not being informed of the facts surrounding this organization.

Living Armstrongism weblog, Posted by Redfox712,

March 2, 2016 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

A report on the MKO hostages’ families’ fourth trip to Camp Liberty

On February 25th, another group of Mujahedin-e Khalq hostages’ families arrived at Camp Liberty gate. The families’ only demand was to visit with their family members enslaved at Camp Liberty, Iraq by the Cult leaders. They have had no contact with their loved ones for many years. They are worried about the destiny of their family members at MKO Cult camp.

The families picketed in front of the Camp Liberty for several days. While crying, the suffering families called their loved ones vociferously.

The families actively tried to convince the brainwashed members to liberate themselves front the Cult’s physical and mental barriers.

Ms. Iranpour whose brothers are held hostages by MKO leaders at Camp Liberty and has several times travelled to Iraq, evaluated the families’ trip to Iraq as favorable. Referring to the families’ revelations to the UNHCR representatives and journalists, Ms. Iranpour reiterated: “the recent trip [to Iraq] has had many achievements. She said despite the MKO Cult leaders’ efforts to confront the effects of family members affections on residents, still some of the residents replied to the families’ passions by waving hands and sending kisses.  

The journalists also attended the families’ picketing in front of the Camp. Mohammad Al- Yaseri wrote a report on South of Lebanon Newspaper titled:” Liberty base… US collusion and silence of the government”. In his report Al-Yaseri wrote: ”…this two-thousand people are held captive by this organization under the supervision of the US and support of the Europe and the shameful silence of the Iraqi government. Today 170 family members arrived at the[Liberty] Camp’s gate in accompany with some TV Channels such as Al-Alam and Al- Etejah Satellite Channel. However the organization didn’t allow them to visit their families in the fear of their defection and return to their homeland…."

The families also wrote a letter to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Iraq demanding to help them visit their loved ones.

March 1, 2016 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

MKO sympathizers’ family members gather in front of Camp Liberty in Iraq

Several Mojahedin Khalgh Organization (MKO) sympathizers’ family members gathered before the Camp Liberty gates on Friday morning, it was reported on Saturday.

MKO sympathizers’ family members were asking for meeting their relatives inside the Camp Liberty.

They also were urging MKO to free their relatives and asking the international community to help release of their family members from the hands of MKO.

Since last year, the MKO sympathizers’ family members have gathered in front of the Camp Liberty gates four times.

In June 2015, Several MKO sympathizers’ family members asked the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) to help them meet their family members.

They urged the international community including US to help release of their family members.

The MKO – listed as a terrorist organization by much of the international community – fled Iran in 1986 for Iraq and was given a camp by former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.

They fought on the side of Saddam during the Iraqi imposed war on Iran (1980-88). They were also involved in the bloody repression of Shiite Muslims in southern Iraq in 1991 and the massacre of Iraqi Kurds.

The notorious group is also responsible for killing thousands of Iranian civilians and officials after the victory of the Islamic revolution in 1979.

More than 17,000 Iranians, many of them civilians, have been killed at the hands of the MKO in different acts of terrorism including bombings in public places and targeted killings.

Back in December 2011, the United Nations and Baghdad agreed to relocate some 3,000 MKO members from Camp New Iraq, formerly known as Camp Ashraf, to the former US military Camp Liberty outside Baghdad.

The last group of the MKO terrorists was evicted by the Iraqi government on September 11, 2013 to join other members of the terrorist group at Camp Liberty and await potential relocation to other countries.

February 29, 2016 0 comments
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Human Rights Abuse in the MEK

On the occasion of Maryam Rajavi’s Women’s Day show

On the Occasion of Mayam Rajavi of Women Show on Feb 27, in Paris

While Maryan Rajavi the leader of the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (the MKO/ Rajavi’s Cult), is about to hold conference on the occasion of Women’s Day on Feb 27, 2016 in Paris, France to allegedly defend the right of Iranian women, one should ask her who is to save the women entangled in your cult in Camp Liberty Iraq. The entanglement that transfered the women to modern slaves that would set themselves a flame when the slaver orders them to do so as Maryam Rajavi did in 2003 when she was arrested by French Judiciary for terrorism and human trafficking and money laundry. [No to terrorism -cults,]

Urgent action is needed to save women from Mojahedin Khalq camps

International Women’s Day (8 March) is a global day celebrating the economic, political and social achievements of women. As the UN suggest, this is the time to uphold women’s achievements, recognize challenges, and focus greater attention on women’s rights and gender equality to mobilize all people to do their part.

While the leader of the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (the MKO/ Rajavi’s Cult), Maryam Rajavi holds conference on the occasion of Women’s Day in Paris, France to allegedly defend the right of Iranian women, one should ask her to present a proposal about the economic, political and social achievements of women in her own camps both in France and Iraq.

Evidences of former members of the Cult of Rajavi, international reports and news reports on the life inside the MKO camps, reveal that women of the MKO gain no economic, political and social achievements. They are just kept in cessation atmosphere, isolated in the cult-like system of the group.

About economic attainments, it should be noted that no woman in the MKO earns money or runs her own business.

Women in the MKO are completely separated from men. Even women are not allowed to associate with their same sex comrades as friends. Friendship is forbidden. Celibacy is obligatory and a lot of other facts that prove that female members of the MKO enjoy no social achievements.

They are not given the slightest opportunity to learn social skills. Most of them have no idea how to use a cellphone.

About political achievements of the MKO female members, it is enough to mention that the group has no significant role in the political scene of Iran. The group is highly unpopular among the Iranian society.

Former members of the Mujahedin Khalq Organization are truly motivated to do their part in order to liberate their ex-comrades held as hostages in the group camps.

February 29, 2016 0 comments
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Camp Liberty

MKO hostages’ families picketing in front of Liberty Gate

A group of 111 family members whose loved ones are trapped in Camp of Mujahedin-e Khalq in Iraq; Camp Liberty arrived at the Camp’s Gate on FEbruary 25.

The families are from different Provinces of Iran. They have risked the dangers and troubles of travelling to the war-torn country of Iraq in a hope to have a short visit with their loved ones. The right which they are denied of, now for many years.

The families gathered in front of Camp Liberty and called their children. Though they are not allowed to use loudspeakers, the families screamed their basic right of visiting their loved ones.

The Rajavi’s brainwashed elements’ reaction was to nervously swear at families.

Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty
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Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty
Families in front of Camp Liberty

February 28, 2016 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

Rajavi’s top military commandant on top of his elimination list

  Elimination Projects in the MKO – Mehdi Eftekhari

“Stalin killed over fifty members of the soviet communist party who opposed his plans for reform in one night and nothing happened,” asserted Massoud Rajavi in a public meeting inside the Mujahedin Khalq. This way, he justifies the removal of each and every person who disagrees with him.

Mehdi Eftekhari (commandant Fathollah) was one of the key members of the MKO’s central committee and its political office. He was the group’s top military commandant who operated certain terrorist acts of the MKO against the Islamic Republic. He was the one who managed Rajavi’s flight to flee Iran for Paris but three decades later, he was demoted to growing vegetables in a his small garden in the corner of Camp Ashraf. Rajavi eliminated all those high-ranking members of the MKO with whom he shared his rank. Since then, he became the absolute power of the cult. 

Mehdi Eftekhari was an active member of the MKO who lost his first wife in the group’s disastrous operation against Iran, the “Eternal Light”. Then, Massoud Rajavi ordered him to marry another female member of the group but not so long after the second marriage, he was forced to divorce his wife. This was an organizational order to the entire members of the group, who according to Massoud were not enough dedicated to the group’s cause and because of that they were responsible for the failure of the Eternal Light! Through his so-called Ideological Revolutuon, Massouid forbid marriage and made celibacy mandatory. Practically he turned the group into a cult.

According to a defector’s weblog, bandrajavi.blogfa, Massoud Rajavi made all members sign a bond under this title “we have no exit”. In the meeting, Massoud threatened his rank and file, “those who want to leave will be faced with the iron fist!”. However, Mehdi Eftehkhari expressed his determination to leave the group. “I want to leave the organization, what should I do?” he asked Massoud Rajavi. Eventually, Mehdi was summoned to the scene by Rajavi who was awfully angry with him. Rajavi humiliated him in front of his lower ranks in the hall severely.

 Based on several articles and testimonies of MKO defectors, he was then under the sever peer pressure in the group’s meetings. Certain defectors remember a meeting in 1991, in which Massoud Rajavi suppressed Eftekhari accusing him of different charges, verbally abusing him…but Mehdi’s reaction was silence!

Since then Commandant Fathollah turned into a depressed and isolated walking dead! He suffered the constant suppression and peer pressure in the group’s indoctrination sessions.  He was diagnosed with cancer but he did not receive proper medical treatment. He died in Camp Ashraf in 2011.

February 27, 2016 0 comments
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Iran Interlink Weekly Digest

Iran Interlink Weekly Digest – 134

++ An Algerian writer, Avatef Farah, who joined in with the MEK anti-Rouhani demo in Paris has now posted her photographs on Facebook exposing the way the MEK have used false pictures and banners. The demonstration had more Arab participants than the MEK, and they had their own anti-Iran slogans not MEK provided ones. Farah comments ‘it is obvious it wasn’t an MEK demo but was an anti-Iran demo paid presumably by the Saudis and Israel’. In her comments she says ‘everyone I asked said Maryam Rajavi had organised it. So why didn’t she attend it herself?’

++ Massoud Khodabandeh writes comparing the collapse of the MEK after the nuclear agreement marked a political ceasefire between Iran and West with the collapse of the MEK after the military ceasefire at the end of Iran-Iraq war. In both cases this exposed the real mercenary nature of the MEK. Before these ceasefires the MEK claimed they would defeat Iran but the moment Iraq said ‘no’ they had to stop, the moment the nuclear agreement was reached they had to stop too. The MEK is not in charge of its own destiny.

++ Over the past two weeks the MEK has relentlessly campaigned to prevent people voting it today’s elections in Iran, arguing that if they stay away from the ballot box, the regime will definitely collapse. No matter what the outcome of the elections, the MEK will claim some influence. Some Farsi commentators are reminded of the election of former President Mohammad Khatami. There was a high turnout, but the MEK claimed it was less than 10% because they had called for a boycott. This sparked the resignation of Hedayat and Maryam Matin Daftary from the MEK’s National Council of Resistance after they had announced internally that they couldn’t go along with this ridiculous assertion by the MEK. Several people also commented on the MEK’s interference in today’s elections by pointing out that neither Maryam Rajavi as the NCRI’s ‘permanently elected’ president nor the ‘Sheikh’ of Saudi Arabia are in any position to even talk about elections let alone call for a boycott.

++ Parviz Khazai, notorious even inside the NCRI for his immoral lifestyle in Scandinavia, gets paid sometimes to write silly articles. This time he has written ‘Who are those who are afraid of the MEK?’ Fanous Association in Germany wrote a short note in response. First they point out that Saddam must be turning in his grave to see money he channelled to the MEK being spent on prostitutes in Scandinavia and writing silly things. Then they answer the article by saying “contrary to what Khazai says, there are many serious people who are afraid of the MEK. Formers are afraid. The security forces in Germany are seriously afraid of the MEK. The families of Rajavi’s hostages in Iraq are afraid. Certainly, no worries have been raised in political circles because there are no worries about the MEK politically. But in terms of MEK violence and crime and killings, everyone is afraid.”

++ Majid Rouhian, an MEK former living in Denmark, has started new series of articles about his experience with the MEK. The title of each one is ‘Massoud Rajavi, was this in line with toppling the Iranian regime?’ He gives various examples such as the MEK torturing himself and colleagues, forcing POWs to join, stealing from shops in Europe (he lists the illegal activities he has undertaken for the MEK), and with each example poses the question, ‘was this in line with toppling the regime?’

In English:

++ Nejat Society has published the first in a series of articles revealing Massoud Rajavi’s elimination projects. “As a totalitarian cult of personality, the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (the MKO) could not survive for over three decades without eliminating the opponents and critics inside the group. According to various reports and testimonies, there have been numerous cases of assassination of dissident members of the Cult of Rajavi. Some of these assassinations were then reported by the group’s media as suicide or even martyrdom.” The first example is Ali Zarkesh who is described as “second to Rajavi and a rival”. Quoting from Mohammad Hossein Sobhani in his book Dark Days of Baghdad, the article reveals “Massoud Rajavi wrote in a letter to one of the group’s high-ranking member, Saeed Shahsavandi, Zarkesh was punished because he had ‘repositioned’! What kind of repositioning deserves death punishment?”

++ A report by Voice of America on Senator John Kerry’s visit to Albania describes the resettlement of the MEK in that country as “…a sensitive issue. The U.S. has assisted Albania in its efforts to resettle the MEK, a group that has supported the U.S. in military operations in the Middle East and in its fight against terrorism.”

++ Sahar Family Foundation reported the story of Mr Ashur Varshi, 46, who escaped Camp Liberty only weeks ago and who is now living in hotel accommodation in Baghdad provided by the Iraqi authorities. “Varshi joined the MKO 27 years ago. As a 19–year–old teenager his ideal was the overthrow of the Islamic Republic through armed struggle. But ultimately, the totalitarian and manipulative system of the group made him leave it. ‘After 27 years of companionship with the group, I was threatened to death (by Alireza Budaqchi under the pseudonym of Ahad) just because I had said that the leader’s arguments were not realistic’, Varshi writes. ‘He [Ahad] used to pressure me to praise the leader’s words’. Ashur who was labeled an anti-leader agent, was eventually supervised all the time. ‘There was an absolutely suppressive atmosphere’, he recounts. ‘I was repeatedly summoned by them; and I was faced with mental torture in order to stop criticizing the group’.”

++ Nejat Association and Sahar Family Foundation report on visits by groups of families from Iran to Camp Liberty. They come seeking contact with their estranged loved ones. “The families gathered in front of Camp Liberty and called their children. Though they are not allowed to use loudspeakers, the families screamed their basic right of visiting their loved ones. The Rajavi’s brainwashed elements’ reaction was to nervously swear at families. Ashur Varshi’s brother was also among the families who have traveled to Iraq. The two brothers saw each other after nearly three decades and the scene was so impressive. The Varshi brothers met at Mohajer Hotel in Baghdad where Ashur resides in accompany with other survivors of the MKO Cult. He is the most recent defector of the Cult.”

February 27, 2016 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

The forth group of MKO hostages’ families arrive at Camp Liberty Gate

A group of 111 family members whose loved ones are trapped in Camp of Mujahedin-e Khalq in Iraq; Camp Liberty arrived at the Camp’s Gate this morning.

The families are from different Provinces of Iran. They have risked the dangers and troubles of travelling to the war-torn country of Iraq in a hope to have a short visit with their loved ones. The right which they are denied of, now for many years.

The families gathered in front of Camp Liberty and called their children. Though they are not allowed to use loudspeakers, the families screamed their basic right of visiting their loved ones.

The Rajavi’s brainwashed elements’ reaction was to nervously swear at families.

Mr. Ashur Varshi’s brother was also among the families who have traveled to Iraq. The two brothers saw each other after nearly three decades and the scene was so impressive. The Varshi brothers met at Mohajer Hotel in Baghdad where Ashur resides in accompany with other survivors of the MKO Cult. He is the most recent defector of the Cult.

Translated by Nejat Society

February 25, 2016 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

A MKO hostage’s mother: I will seek my son until my last breath

Ms. Nedaei is the suffering mother of one of the MKO Cult hostages. Her son was a prisoner of Iran-Iraq war when the Mujahedin-e Khalq elements deceived and recruited him by their false propaganda. 

Ms. Nedaei has recently traveled to Iraq, Camp Liberty in a hope to visit her dear son. She narrates her sufferings:

I am old and it’s difficult for me to travel. However, I have several times traveled to Iraq to meet my dear son; Fereydoun. My son didn’t know the MKO. He was a loyal soldier of his country. He was imprisoned during the Iran-Iraq War. Then under the brainwashing methods of the MKO Cult mercenaries he joined the group. I am a mother and will seek my son till I take my last breath.  

This time also the Rajavis’ Cult leaders didn’t allow me to visit my son. I shouted Fereydoun’s name as much as I could and I will do this again.

This time the MKO Cult leaders had brought some members to swear at families. Though their faces were covered, still I recognized my son; Fereydoun. He had stood among the other members. He was calm and didn’t curse. He just was looking at me.

The Cult leaders couldn’t tolerate our visit. I just wanted to see my son and hug him after so many years.

I am a mother. I will strive to reach my son. The Rajavis are the final losers…

February 24, 2016 0 comments
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