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Former members of the MEK

I‘m a woman escaped from MKO camp

Memoirs of Ms. Batoul Soltani – Part two

In his phone calls, Masud Rajavi tried to know why I was upset by making jokes and having fun. He wanted to know what my problem was. I didn’t tell him what my problem was. I was very sad. I had many questions on the organization. I felt that I have lost all my life, wasting my lifetime for looking for nothing. I even saw that the organization didn’t obey its own principles. For example, at that time, we claimed to be anti-Imperialism so much, but I saw how they spread red carpet for the Americans in Camp Ashraf welcoming them warmly. They named the cooperation with Americans as the struggle with the main enemy which is Islamic Republic, saying that

“It doesn’t matter to negotiate with the US to fight the main enemy.”

Sometimes, I asked them:

” why do you make the youth miserable by bringing them to the organization? Why haven’t we overthrown the regime yet after two decades? Or why are we struggling at all?”

However I was stuck in vain, this was not a factor to make me escape or leave the organization until the day I was working on the computer and I entered the private network of Mozhgan Parsaie. In fact I was supposed to fix their network. In one of their rooms, I entered Mozhgan Parsaie’s network where she had prepared a report which was supposed to be sent to Maryam Rajavi. I read the report and I saw what she had written about me. I got shocked extremely wondering what the reason of all respects they had for me was and what this report is. I felt they are so hypocrite and the word hypocrite really deserves them. They had back-bitted about me writing anything they could write about me although I was a member of Leadership Council. For instance they had written that I have moral problems or I have problems with children etc…. they had stated that my situation was so crucial. So I got very upset since they had wasted my life. I was looking for a way to carry out my decision and soon I was able to pack my bag and escape from the camp. We were seriously controlled.

We couldn’t walk around the camp alone. The low-ranking members were told:

“You may be arrested or kidnapped by the others who traffic the camp.”

 The members do not trust anybody. They are always monitoring each other. I was in the Leadership Council, so I know that they falsely say that

 “We do not allow the women to walk alone due to lack of security in the camp.“

In fact they want to cover the reality of their jobs.

The women were controlled in a particular way, so strictly, that Rajavi had soon sworn that

“We have no female defector”,

The control over the women members were more sever because he wanted to prove his claim.

Since I couldn’t get out alone, I planned a way to escape. At the sunset time, I put a back bag on the front seat of my jeep and I put a cap and a scarf on the pack bag to make the figure of a woman. Therefore I could pass the control station. I told them that my colleague is taking a nap on the front seat. So I could get out until I reached the street around the camp where I parked the car and walked out of the prison I had spent so many years  of my life: Two decades of my life, from the moment I was recruited by the cult until the time I could run away by a complex plan. When I was escaping from the camp, I didn’t intend to go to TIPF (the American camp). I had some tools such as a wire cutter to cut the barbed wires and walk out of the camp. I knew that there are some hungry dogs wondering around the camp. I brought some food to give them in case of the risk of their attack. When I entered the deserts around the camp and I was walking towards the cast, I encountered the dogs. So I gave the food and water to them. They became my friends and escorted me.

But when I got to the barbed wires I found out that I had lost my wire cutter when I was trying to feed the dogs. So I changed my plan and decided to go to American camp. I came towards the American camp and tried to draw the soldiers’ attention to myself, but they couldn’t hear me because they were listening to music by their headsets. I tried to shout, using my English. I told them that

 “I am a woman who escaped from MKO camp and I don’t want the organization learns about me.”

Finally I could get in the camp of American forces.

In the camp, MKO tried to contact me, in many ways. They sent me letters, messages,.. They even called me on the cell phones which were held secretly in the American camp. They wanted me to get back to Ashraf promising me to do anything I want such as going to Europe or giving financial aids. Then they launched a large attempt to attract me by my children. They knew that I was looking for my children. They particularly wanted to bring my daughter to camp Ashraf so as I would get back. They even had her supervisor, in Europe, call me so that they can control me out of Camp Ashraf and even abroad. But I never let them get close to me. They had taken my daughter as a hostage; she wasn’t allowed to call me. She was told a lot of nonsense about me. They had even told her to have an interview against me but she hadn’t accepted because she was busy with her studies and her personal life.

I stayed in TIPF for a period of time. Americans suggested working for them. I did their computer works about storage of their goods listing them in the computer and I was paid 2.5 dollars an hour.

Meanwhile I had some contacts with my family. I was sometimes afraid of my future life. I was afraid of making mistake. I didn’t know what was waiting for me. Sometimes I got disappointed. The organization was also trying hard to have me back with promises of money or a free life in Europe but I was sure that I would have no way out with MKO except that same isolated cult.

We had many difficulties in TIPF. The Americans didn’t help us; instead they aided the organization to become more stable, for example they recognized Mozjgan Parsaie but not the separated members of the cult. The organization used the opportunity and expanded its control and hegemony over the members more and more. The pressure of the meetings was increased.

In the meetings, about 300 people were shouting at an individual asking him or her:

” what is in your mind? Why do you want to leave the camp? Why do you think about your children or husband?”

When I just remember these memories, I get terrified. So I didn’t think about any of their suggestions. In my contacts with my family, they couldn’t help me so much they wanted to help me in their own way offering their emotions and sympathy.

Translation:Nejat Society

                                                                                    To be continued

November 1, 2008 0 comments
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Nejat Publications

Nejat NewsLetter NO.25

Nejat NewsLetter - Issue No.25

Inside this issue:

1.    Future of the Ashraf Base

2.    How many women have reached the summit?

3.    MEPs intrigued by accounts of newly arrived escapees

4.    Nejat Society Visits Geneva Deciding the fate of the Mujahedin

5.    Ashraf — when is a city not a city?

6.    Iraq urges US to stop backing MKO

7.    MKO, another version of al-Qaeda

8.    Mojahedin Khalq on the run

9.    International law to determine MKO fate

10. Pardoned ex-MKO members return to Iran

11. A Camp Ashraf in France

12. Resolution ratified by the Iraqi Administration

13. Iraq: No country willing to take MKO Ashraf camp captives.

14. OPINION – Americas tough decision

15. The MEK and US-Iran Relations

16. Iranian exiles arrested

Download Nejat NewsLetter ISSUE NO.25

October 30, 2008 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Distress of Gang of Rajavi over Family visits

The cult of Rajavi has become so far from the realities of the free society. The isolated atmosphere of the cult has caused a clear distance between the inside and outside of Camp Ashraf so as it is really unable to do anything out of the camp relations. They are even terrified of the visits of the members and their families who are so limited to have a short visit under the sever control of the officials of the cult.

They are even terrified of the visits of the members and their families who are so limited to have a short visit under the sever control of the officials of the cult.

 

The leaders of MKO have invested too much effort to prevent the family visits which have double consequences for the MEK.

 

From one side, the member who has visited his family is suddenly shocked due to the short time of separation from the controlling cycle which rules the cult, so he become depressed and passive after the visit; he gets far from the illusionary atmosphere of the cult where he was under sever manipulation techniques. This condition (becoming shocked, out of the illusions which surrendered his mind) is considered as a deadly poison by the leaders of the cult.

 

Therefore, they immediately try to clear up the effects of the visits on the minds of the individuals by using their organizational indoctrination methods.

 

From the other side, the supervision system ruling the organization, suspects any person (with any rank degree) whose family comes for a visit. The person becomes their anti security subject since then. The patrolling and monitoring teams of Camp Ashraf control him all the time, supervising all his behavior in any situation.

 

One probability which is considered about those who had family visits is that they are supposed to escape from the camp by the help of their families.

 

The disciplinary Relations of Camp Ashraf includes:

“Any relative or family member of Ashraf residents, who want to visit in Camp Ashraf, should be considered as the agent of the Intelligence Ministry and there is no way for their immediate check. Especially the older brothers or sisters of the members or the ones of their relatives, who have already supported the organization and had been imprisoned because of that, are the agents of regime who come to Camp Ashraf in order to make contacts and get intelligence.”

Thus, following the visits, Mujahedin have always the feeling that the person has been recruited by the Iranian Intelligence Ministry and must be completely isolated.

 

To justify their claims and to prevent the forces from making problems, they tell the members:

”since the families are much far from us, the Islamic Regime has worked on their minds for so long and recruited them.”

The important issue that should be noticed again is that although MKO uses its entire controlling monitoring system to keep the members isolated, the family visits are still the main security problem for MKO and it can never surmount the influences of the emotional relationships.

October 29, 2008 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

Iran Protest Letter Circulated at UN

The United Nations published Iran’s protest letter to the secretary general concerning the removal of the terrorist Mujahedin Khalq Organization (MKO) from the British government’s terror list.

Iran’s representative to the UN, Mohammad Khazaei, in a letter to Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council, had condemned a decision by London to remove the MKO from its list of terrorist organizations.

In the document, which was circulated in the General Assembly and the Security Council on Thursday, Khazaei asserted that there is clear evidence that the group, which is guilty of many bloody terrorist attacks in Iran for 30 years, was (also) involved in a series of terrorist activities since 2003, IRIB reported.

The MKO claims it relinquished its military hardware to coalition forces in Iraq and denounced violence and terrorism in 2003.

Despite the terrorist nature of the group, the UK’s Court of Appeals and Brown’s government turned a blind eye to the hostile activities of the group, the envoy told the world body.

British lawmakers removed the MKO from the UK’s list of banned terror groups on June 22. Legislators then approved the decision of the Court of Appeals, which had ruled in May that the MKO should no longer be listed as a proscribed group. The MKO has committed acts of aggression against both Iranian and Iraqi nationals and remains banned by the European Union and the United States.

According to Iran’s Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki, the group has killed over 16,000 people in and outside Iran, including one president, a prime minister, four ministers, dozens of parliamentarians, and senior officials.

Mottaki suggested that Britain has become a partner in MKO crime by lifting the ban. “[We will consider] any country that removes the Mujahedin Khalq Organization from its blacklist of terrorist groups as a partner in its terrorist activities,“ he warned.

He urged all countries to condemn terrorism in all forms and without discrimination, adding that in the eyes of Iranians the MKO is the most disreputable group.

 

Political Verdict

On Thursday a European court, in a politically-motivated move, overturned an EU decision to freeze the assets of the group notorious for its terrorist acts against Iranians and Iraqis.

The MKO is blacklisted as a terrorist organization by many countries, and has claimed responsibility for various terror attacks inside Iran.

The Luxembourg-based Court of First Instance, however, delivered a controversial verdict on Thursday that dealt a fresh blow to EU efforts against the group by rejecting the bloc’s decision to freeze MKO assets.

It was the latest in a series of anti-Iran verdicts in support of MKO demands that they be removed from the list.

EU’s second-highest court held that “the EU had failed to give sufficient reasons to keep the Mujahedin Khalq Organization on the list, following a British court decision to remove them from the national list“.

Renewed support for the organization came after the UK Proscribed Organizations Appeal Commission (POAC) ordered the MKO be removed from Britain’s list of terrorist organizations. The group remains on the bloc’s blacklist as a result of a review in July.

The EU decision to keep the group on the list was based on measures implemented in respect of a UN Security Council resolution requiring countries to crack down on terror funding in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks against America.

Soon after the victory of the Islamic Revolution in 1979, the group launched terrorist operations against Iran. The attacks intensified during the Iraqi-imposed war (1980-88) in

October 28, 2008 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

Iran protests to Italy over support for terrorist MKO Tehran

Iran has expressed formal protest to Italy for its support for the terrorist Mojahedin Khalq Organization (MKO), Foreign Ministry spokesman, Hassan Qashqavi, said on Monday.

 

Qashqavi made the remarks commenting on Rome’s recent decision to unfreeze the terrorist group’s assets.

 

MKO is recognized as a terrorist group for many cases of bombings, killings and attacks against civilians and government officials.

 

The group is also well known for collaboration with Iraqi dictator Saddam Hossein to suppress the Iraqi Kurds.

 

"We have expressed our protest through diplomatic channels to say that the sectarian and terrorist nature of MKO has not changed," he said in his weekly press conference.

 

Noting that MKO was responsible for killing of 12,000 innocent Iranian, Kurd and Iraqi Shiite people, Qashqavi said the group is still in the list of terrorist organizations for its crimes.

 

"The Western intelligence agencies have massive information about MKO’s crimes and cannot claim that it has gone through any change," the spokesman added.

October 28, 2008 0 comments
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Iraq

No MKO member is allowed to enter Arbil

Iraq – Governor of Arbil rejected and called a big lie the news about establishing a new camp for members of notorious Mujahedin-e Khalg Organization in Northern Province of Arbil.

 

In an interview with Fars news agency correspondent in Iraq’s Kurdistan region, the governor of Arbil Nozad Hadi rejected severely current rumors about the presence of elements of MKO terrorist group in this province.

 

Calling the construction of new camps for MKO in Kurdistan region as a big lie Hadi said: As the governor of Arbil I strongly reject the existence of any MKO base in Kurdistan.

 

He also clarified: no MKO member is allowed to enter Arbil province which is located at the heart of Kurdistan region.

 

In response to the question “would you take MKO under protection if they be expelled from Dyala?” The Iraqi official also said: “I think the Kurdistan officials would never commit such a mistake.”

 

These statements come at the time when some media report of America’s efforts to establish a new fully equipped camp for MKO terrorist group 30 kilometers away from Arbil.

 

Significant is that no Iraqi Kurd official has so far confirmed these reports.

 

October 28, 2008 0 comments
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Duplicity of the MEK nature

A Misunderstood Court Judgment

In an interview with Radio Italy, channel 1, Maryam Rajavi, leading the cult of Mojahedin in the absence of her husband, stated that “…four international European courts have ruled out the illegal terror tag. Therefore, the European governments should listen to their parliamentarians and take the PMOI off the list”.

 

We do not know exactly when and where these four stated courts ruled removal of the terror tag from the organization, but if she means the last case judged by the European Court of First Instance in Luxembourg on 23 October 2008 it has to be stated that she has misunderstood the judgment. The court never judges that European Union has wrongly blacklisted the organization on its terrorist list and that it has to be removed.

 

She had earlier, and following the verdict, said that "The court’s verdict acknowledges the right to resist against dictatorship and represents the triumph of justice over politics and economic dealings and interests". It is itself another issue that how a court’s judgment may buy legitimacy for a blacklisted terrorist organization with countless evidences of terrorist atrocities against its own people.

 

Here is the court’s judgment with no further comment:

 

JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE (Seventh Chamber)

 

23 October 2008

 

hereby:

 

1. Dismisses the action as unfounded in so far as it seeks annulment of Council Decision 2007/445/EC of 28 June 2007 implementing Article 2(3) of Regulation (EC) No 2580/2001 on specific restrictive measures directed against certain persons and entities with a view to combating terrorism and repealing Decisions 2006/379/EC and 2006/1008/EC;

 

2. Annuls Article 1 of Council Decision 2007/868/EC of 20 December 2007 implementing Article 2(3) of Regulation No 2580/2001 on specific restrictive measures directed against certain persons and entities with a view to combating terrorism and repealing Decision 2007/445, and point 2.19 of the list annexed to that decision, in so far as they concern the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran;

 

3. Dismisses the action as unfounded in so far as it seeks annulment of the other provisions of Decision 2007/868, so far as the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran is concerned;

 

4. Orders the Council to bear, in addition to its own costs, one third of the costs of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran;

 

5. Orders the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, the Commission and the Kingdom of the Netherlands to pay their own costs.

 

October 27, 2008 0 comments
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Duplicity of the MEK nature

Rajavi Cooperated with SAVAK

 

There are some evidences that Masoud Rajavi cooperated with SAVAK (Pahlavi regime’s security and intelligence organization) deliberately while in prison following the mass arrests in 1970s, when majority of the organization’s leaders and members were arrested on terrorist charges. According to Lotfollah Meisami, an eyewitness of Rajavi’s interrogations, he snitched extra information to SAVAK agents to immune himself against further pressures if they could have access to unreleased information. Giving false or burned information on the part of political prisoners is justifiable but giving more irrelevant information implies that Rajavi submitted completely to SAVAK playing a passive role to stop being tortured by the horrible, notorious security organization of Pahlavi’s regime and to win their full trust. In this regard, Meisami refers to a case in which Rajavi gave details of how Mojahedin fighters would carry their weapon concealed in handbags:  

 

He (Rajavi) in one of his interrogations even referred to a suitcase in which weapons were hidden. He did so to defend himself it in case it would be unveiled in future. The interrogators came to analyze that he was a man to invest on. 1     

 

It happened at a time when Mojahedin were on a path of struggle with the regime and absolutely reprehended any cooperation with SAVAK and even those members suffering under the heavy pressure and torture avoided to establish friendly relations only to be relieved of sufferings. Thus, Rajavi’s intimate manner of conduct with SAVAK agents to win their attention was in no way justifiable. The statements made by Meisami imply that Rajavi did so to prove he had repented and to take a path of passivity while in prison:

 

Rajavi was on friendly terms with SAVAK to the point that other prisoners called him a fop. He pretended to be very knowledgeable and we did not know why he did so. 2

 

Another instance is Rajavi’s passivity to tensions created inside prisons.  It seems he evaded to be engaged in clashes that provoked SAVAK further and thus aggravated the conditions which could even lead prisoners to the edge of execution. The indifference on the part of Rajavi confirms the claims made by MKO former members that he had a fully passive role when SAVAK was hunting down the organization that led to their mass arrests:  

 

Rumors ran rampant that they executed political prisoners with untried. Rajavi and some other members withdrew and concluded not to mess with SAVAK agents; it was the start of a round of collaboration with SAVAK. 3

Rajavi demonstrated his goodwill to SAVAK in various ways one of which was demanding facilities the agents of a regime with whom others were engaged in a heavy battle. His demands implied his indifference to the course of events in the society, his alliance with regime forces, and also his weak, conservative mode. Meisami refers to some instances of Rajavi’s demands in that critical period of the Iranian history: 

 

When Rajavi came to Qasr prison, he smoked an expensive brand of cigarettes. Those arrested as demonstrators against the regime, would break into chanting ‘down with Shah’ in prison cells while some Mojahedin high ranks asked for TV. It was somehow a pulling out and they had quieted down to show their readiness to cooperate with SAVAK. 4

 

Other MKO former members have stated some cases in this regard too. For example, Mehdi Khoshhal who witnessed the conflict between Abbas Davari and Masoud Rajavi quotes Davari complaining about Rajavi’s egocentric manner in the National Council of Resistance in its early years and says: 

 

This buster (Masoud Rajavi) who thunders today is very cagey. He was never given a basting in prison. He played a trick of abstaining from food to become weak and so fainted whenever SAVAK agents came to interrogate him. However, he would draw details of Hanifnejad and other’s residence when they put him under pressure. 5

 

The cases mentioned indicate that they fail to be sheer follies and errors somebody might make, rather they are characteristic outcomes of a double-crosser. Neither has he the guts to suffer hardships of a freedom-fighter nor can he curb his egocentric, ambitious demands that he tries to accomplish on the expense of others. Many folded personality of Rajavi makes it hard to believe that it is his errors and mistakes that has steered the organization to the terminus of a terrorist cult.

 

References

 

1. Ethical comedown of a Mojahed, Journal of The way of Mojahed

 

2. ibid

 

3. ibid

 

4. ibid

 

5. Khoshhal, Mehdi, Fighting Dictatorship.

October 27, 2008 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

Half-measures by European Union

Experts on the Mojahedin-e Khalq organization (MKO) have previously stated that the huge amounts of finance and resources, particularly the cult’s human resources, expended over the past eight years solely on being removed from the various terrorist lists on which it has been named, has shown that the lists have made no material difference to the operation of this terrorist group. As a means to ‘combat terrorism and its funding‘, the terrorist lists have been, at best, irrelevant to the activities of the MKO in western countries. Indeed, in this context, inclusion in the terrorist lists has served one obvious purpose, to artificially increase the ‘threat’ value of this group in negotiation with the IRI.

                                    

In real terms the group’s relevance and actual potency as either a so-called ‘democratic’ opposition or a ‘military’ threat to Iran’s governance has dwindled severely since the MKO’s last failed effort to overthrow the regime by force in 1988.

 

Instead the real struggle conducted by the MKO’s over the past twenty years since this major failure has not been to overthrow the regime itself but has been directed at preserving its value to western powers both through its paramilitary force in Iraq and through its second base in Auvers-sur-Oise from where its financial, recruitment, planning and propaganda activities are directed.

 

However, the MKO’s value to western backers has been in its potential for armed activity. Armed activity is this group’s USP (unique selling point). This is what it does, what it has always done and what its real value is. The existence of the MKO as a mercenary paramilitary force – whether armed or not – in Iraq has always been the central appeal of the group, whether to Saddam Hussein, or the USA, UK, EU or Israel.

 

The MKO currently holds its 3000 uniformed militants captive behind the closed doors of Camp Ashraf in the Diyali province of Iraq. Since the forced disarmament of the group by the American military in June 2005, members of the group have been trapped inside the camp by cult leaders Massoud and Maryam Rajavi as hostages while they negotiate deals with western backers. In this, the Rajavis have been aided by the American military, which under the pretext of ‘protection’ has denied free access to the group by international humanitarian bodies, human rights agencies and even to relatives of the individuals held there.

 

In order to facilitate this ‘protection’ the Rajavis and the American military have maintained the lie that the MKO terrorist group enjoys UN Fourth Geneva Convention Protected Persons status, even though the competent UN body for awarding this status has stated clearly and repeatedly that the conditions for its application have not existed since 2004 and that in any case Protected Persons status cannot be applied to a paramilitary force. The perpetuation of this lie by the MKO’s western backers has, unfortunately, prevented investigation into worsening conditions inside the camp, particularly investigation into specific allegations of human rights abuses against the people held there. It has also prevented many of the people inside Camp Ashraf from taking the decision to reject violence and terrorism and leave the MKO. The people in Camp Ashraf are essentially hostages.

 

In this respect, the decision makers of the European Union should not be overly concerned with the freeing or not of the MKO’s assets (while the group apparently has millions of euros to spend on legal fees) but should be concerned instead with freeing its 3000 militants from enforced membership of a paramilitary group.

 

By analyzing its track record of activity, it is obvious that since the fall of its previous benefactor Saddam Hussein, the MKO and the group’s backers in western countries are happy to sacrifice the people in Camp Ashraf purely for their financial and political benefit in Europe, America and Israel. There is a moral and legal burden on the countries of the EU, the UK, the USA and Israel which have allowed (encouraged even) the Rajavis to take these people hostage and offer them as sacrifice, to provide retirement and immunity after the fall of Saddam and give their mercenary force shelter in their countries. They should not be left in Iraq or the Middle East but should be returned to France and the other countries which originally sponsored Rajavi and which then sold the MKO to Saddam’s regime.

 

Any form of legal and/or political action which will facilitate the return of this group to Europe, including de-proscription of the MKO in the EU, the USA and Israel, must be welcomed.

 

After five years it must be accepted that responsibility for the total membership of the MKO is no longer with Saddam Hussein, but is with the forces which invaded Iraq and removed him from power, and which now still benefit from preservation of the MKO as a paramilitary force. It is an overriding fact that the MKO’s value lies in its capacity for violence. Indeed, aside from its well-funded, propaganda activity aimed at perverting western political opinion, its only function and value is as an armed terrorist force.

 

Taking responsibility for the MKO it is expected that the Multi-national force (MNF) in Iraq:

 

1. Replace the TIPF which was closed in January 2008 with a new, separate camp in which individuals can freely seek asylum and take refuge from a terrorist organization;

2. Unlock the gates of Camp Ashraf so that human rights and humanitarian agencies, and families can have free and unfettered access to these hostages;

3. As a matter of urgency, de-proscribe the organization – the so-called ‘good-terrorists’ – from western terrorist lists so the victims of the cult can be moved to those western countries for which they have worked so hard and sacrificed so much.

 

Unfortunately, although the UK removed the MKO from its terrorist list, the UK has not met its obligation to accept their mercenaries in the country and provide asylum for them. This is in spite of the Iraqi government’s repeated demand that this and all the foreign terrorist groups be removed from its territory. This failure encourages the suspicion that the 3000 uniformed militants are to continue to be victimized and made to fight against the Iraqi people – just as Saddam Hussein used the MKO to suppress the Shiite and Kurdish uprisings in Iraq in 1991. (It is no secret that Saddamists and other anti-Iraq groups which maintain connection with the west continue to use Camp Ashraf for meetings.)

 

De-proscription can be for two reasons. If the MKO’s 3000 strong paramilitary force remains in Iraq it has no other use except as an armed force and de-proscription is a political ruse. The only other interpretation of de-proscription is that all 3000 members have renounced violence. In this case, these people must be re-habilitated as non-terrorists by bringing them back to western countries to live. This will provide the best possible outcome for the Iraqi government and for western countries which are genuine in their wish to combat terrorism and its funding.

 

October 27, 2008 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

Iran’s letters to UN, UNSC on MKO recorded as UN documents

Iran’s letters to the UN Chief and Head of the UN Security Council in protest to London’s deproscribing the terrorist Mojahideen Khalq Organization (MKO) from the British list of terrorist groups have become the UN Security Council and the UN General Assembly documents.

Iran’s Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the UN Mohammad Khazaei in separate letters to the UN Chief and the UN Security Council Head recently voiced strong protest at the UK government’s recent gesture of clearing the MKO’s name from the list of terrorist groups.

Khazaei said in the letters that the terrorist and criminal group had, relying on its strategy of resort to terrorism and gun battle and also its wrong ideology, been engaged for long years in wide-scale terrorist activities against Iranian nationals and officials as well as nationals of other countries

The letters read that the MKO had through its terrorist actions martyred thousands of Iranian nationals, including political personalities and Majlis members, and injured thousands of others, inflicting abundant financial and non-financial damage.

October 26, 2008 0 comments
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