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Cyber Attack
Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

Israel, Albania and MEK to tighten alliance

The Albanian Prime Minister who hosts the Mujahedin Khalq Organization, visited Israel last week. The three-day visit took place, after the leader of the MEK, Maryam Rajavi, visited the Israeli ambassador to Tirana in her headquarters in Albania.

Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama’s visit to Israel was focused on cybersecurity. He visited the head of Israel’s National Cyber Directorate, Gaby Portnoy, according to the Times of Israel. In September, Israel offered cyber-defense assistance to Albania, days after the Balkan state severed its diplomatic ties with Iran based on allegations that the Islamic Republic had carried out cyberattacks against the country in July.

Edi Rama

Edi Rama visited the head of Israel’s National Cyber Directorate, Gaby Portnoy

Following the collapse of its communist government in the early 1990s, Albania has transformed into a steadfast ally of the United States and the West, officially joining NATO in 2009. As a NATO member which enjoys the US’s sponsorship, Albania has accepted the US’s request to host the MEK’s formerly designated terrorists in its territory since 2013.

Iran and Albania turned into bitter foes, since the Balkan state received the MEK on its soil. Iran rejected the accusation it was behind the cyberattack as “baseless” and called Albania’s decision to sever diplomatic ties “an ill-considered and shortsighted action.”

As one of the target countries of cyberattacks on its critical infrastructure, Iran condemns the MEK and its allies, US and Israel for several cyber attacks on its infrastructures. For several years, Iran and the other three have been involved in a largely clandestine cyberwar that occasionally comes to the surface.

The Iranian government systems have been targeted by cyberattacks, most notably in 2010 when the Stuxnet virus —engineered by Israel and the US — infected its nuclear program. In June, this year, Iranian state media said that the internal computer system of the municipality of Tehran was targeted in a “deliberate” shutdown in a cyber-attack. In October, a cyber-attack brought all fuel distribution stations in the country to a halt, resulting in long lines at petrol stations. An Iranian official said Israel and the United States were likely to have been behind the fuel service cyber-attack.

However, the MEK-Israel alliance has not been restricted to cyber warfare. The group is believed to be the operative arm of the Israeli intelligence, Mossad. In November 2012, NBC News reported that deadly attacks on Iranian nuclear scientists were being carried out by the MEK. The report cited two American officials that the group was financed, trained and armed by Israel’s secret service.

Netanyahou

Deadly attacks on Iranian nuclear scientists were being carried out by the MEK under the order of Israel

The Mossad’s actions in using MEK to kill the Iranian nuclear scientists qualify as terrorism. Referring to the MEK_US_ Israel alliance, in February 2012, before the MEK was delisted from the DOS’s list of foreign terrorist organizations, Glenn Greenwald, the US prominent journalist stated that the MEK which is “basically little more than a nomadic cult” and “widely loathed in Iran” can pay top American politicians to advocate for them even as they engage in violent Terrorist acts, all while being trained, funded and aided by America’s top client states. Daniel Larison of the American Conservative also put at the time that the murders of Iranian nuclear scientists with bombs have been committed by the MEK and so the US and Israel are by definition, state sponsors of Terrorism.

Today, the formerly terrorist designated People’s Mojahedin of Iran (PMOI/ MEK) are used as cyber terrorists sponsored by US, Israel and their subsidized partner Albania. The new alliance is focused on cyber warfare, what the MEK’s troll farm has expertise and experience in. The group’s financial support and data source of intelligence seems to be generously provided by the enemies of their enemy.

Mazda Parsi

October 31, 2022 0 comments
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Rajavi and ISIS
Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

The MeK, a Predecessor of ISIS in Attack on Worshipers

As a result of a terrorist attack on the holy shrine of Shah-e Cheragh in Iran’s southern city of Shiraz on October 26, 13 people have been killed and 30 others wounded.

The Islamic State group late Wednesday claimed responsibility for the attack on its Amaq news agency. It said an armed militant stormed the shrine and opened fire on its visitors. It claimed that some 20 people were killed and dozens more were wounded.

Two children were among the victims, according to state-run Press TV.

CCTV footage broadcast on state TV on Thursday showed the attacker entering the shrine after hiding an assault rifle in a bag and shooting as worshipers tried to flee and hide in corridors.

Shahcheragh Shrine

terrorist attack on the holy shrine of Shah-e Cheragh in Iran’s southern city of Shiraz on October 26

ISIS has claimed previous attacks in Iran, including deadly twin attacks in 2017 that targeted parliament and the tomb of the Islamic Republic’s founder Ruhollah Khomeini.

Wednesday’s killing of Shia pilgrims came on the same day that Iranian security forces clashed with increasingly rioters marking 40 days since the death of Mahsa Amini.

The ISIS is not the only terrorist group which has resorted to the violence against worshipers in Iran. The first group which targeted prayers in Iran is the Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization, aka MeK or MeK. In this regard, one can consider the MeK as the predecessor of ISIS.

In what follows, we mention three cases of Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization’s attacks on prayers in Iran.

On September 11, 1981, a bomb exploded by the MeK agents in the Friday prayer altar of Tabriz after Friday prayers. In this terrorist explosion, six prayers along with Ayatollah Seyyed Assadollah Madani, the Friday prayer Imam of Tabriz, were killed and 38 people were injured.

On December 11, 1981, the then Friday prayer Imam of Shiraz Ayatollah Seyyed Adbulhussain Dastgheib were killed along with ten of his companions when a bomb exploded as they were heading to Shiraz main mosque to perform the Friday prayer. The assassin, Gowhar Adab-Awaz, was a female member of the MeK.

On July 2, 1982 as a result of a bomb blast at the Friday prayer place in Yazd, five prayers along with the then Friday prayer Imam of Yazd Ayatollah Sadoughi were killed. A few months later, on October 14th, the MeK assassinated Ayatollah Seyyed Asadullah Madani, the Friday prayer Imam of Bakhtaran.

On March 15, 1985, 14 worshipers were martyred and 110 people were injured due to the explosion of a bomb planted by the MeK members in Friday prayer of Tehran.

By reviewing these mentioned attacks and comparing them with the recent attack in Shiraz, one can rightly call MeK as the predecessor of other terrorist groups such as ISIS in attack on worshipers.

Also, By Monitoring the MeK’s media, including its websites and social networks, one can find that how this organization, by calling on its terrorist cells known as rebel centers, has drove the protests to radicalism. During the recent years’ protests in Iran, the MeK has incited the protesters to adopt radical approaches and pick up arms, in an effort to divert protest movements into violent riots and thus has provided the causes of their failures.

October 30, 2022 0 comments
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Shahcheragh
Iran

Iran’s interior Minister on the terrorist act in Shah Cheragh Shrine

Shiraz, IRNA – Interior minister said combination war plot of enemies against Iran will lead nowhere, and terrorist act in Shah Cheragh Holy Shrine by shooting at innocent people and their children was a sign of enemies’ desperateness.

Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi who is visiting Shiraz after Wednesday terrorist attack in Shah Cheragh Holy Shrine, said, “The October 26 terrorist attack in Shah Cheragh Holy Shrine was a phased in the enemies’ project, whose objective is intriguing insecurity and instability in the country.”

He emphasized that in that terrorist act the United States, Israel, the monarchist groups, the MKO, the ISIS and some western countries were involved, and this event is a complete file of the intriguers of corruption, darkness, and terror.”

The interior minister said that martyring a number of defenseless women, men and children was the last scene of a scenario of the enemies of the system and the revolution, and the criminal act showed that they are not committed to any rule of humanity.

Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi is accompanying the First Vice President Mohammad Mokhber in this visit to Shiraz, and their host is the Governor of Fars Province Mohammad-Hadi Imaniyeh.

On Wednesday (Oct 26) a terrorist armed with a machinegun opened fire on the pilgrims and evening prayer worshippers at Shah Cheragh holy shrine, martyring 15 innocent people, including some women, children and elderly folks, and seriously wounding 26 others.

October 30, 2022 0 comments
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MEK self immolation
Former members of the MEK

They took my children as hostages to make me commit suicide

In June 2003, when Maryam Rajavi was arrested by French Police in her headquarters in the Parisian suburb, Auver sur d’Oise, Mostafa Mohammadi was a sympathizer of the group and two of his children Somayeh and Mohammad were serving as child soldiers in the Mujahedin-e Khalq’s military camp in Iraq.

That morning, Mostafa received a call from the group. “They told me that Maryam Rajavi was arrested and members had to commit suicide in front of French embassies to protest her arrest,” Mostafa recalls. It was a serious problem. Mostafa’s two children were in the group and he had to obey what they coerced him to do. Their life was at risk.

https://dlb.nejatngo.org/Media/Documentary/Mohammadi-Mostafa-Immolation.mp4

to download the video file click here

The world was shocked by the scenes of self-immolations of MEK members in western cities. Western journalist had been already present on the scene. They had been informed about the incidents by MEK agents!
Mostafa got ready to set himself o fire in front of French embassy in Ottawa. He poured petrol all over his body but a journalist snatched the lighter from his hand and a police officer stopped him. Other MEK sympathizers on the scene, wearing yellow jackets with the image of Maryam Rajavi on them, were just watching him. Watch the clip here.

October 26, 2022 0 comments
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Albania - MEK - Ashraf 3
Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

The MEK; useful and good terrorists Albania must host

Could hosting a banned Iranian dissident group compromise Albania’s security?

Some 30 kilometres west from Albania’s capital Tirana, nestled between a mountain range and the Adriatic Sea, lies the town of Manëz.

With a population of roughly 7,000 and picturesque views in every direction, it is a typical Albanian town, save for one fact: it hosts Camp Ashraf-3, the base of Iranian dissident group known as the People’s Mujahedin of Iran.

Going by its Farsi acronym of MEK, the group has had a presence in Albania since at least 2013. In its heyday, it was one of the main groups struggling against the imperial regime in Iran, playing a major role in the 1979 revolution before falling out with the newly-established Islamic Republic led by Ayatollah Khomeini.

Over time, the group’s significance diminished.

Camp Ashraf 3 in Albania

Camp Ashraf 3 in Albania

Currently, roughly 3,000 members of MEK are estimated to live in Camp Ashraf-3, a heavily fortified compound. The camp’s perimeter is lined with Iranian flags and guarded by Albanian private security.

And although the group gets little mainstream attention, it has actively been courted by powers hostile to Iran, primarily the United States. MEK’s leader, Maryam Rajavi (wife of one of the group’s founders, Massoud Rajavi, presumed dead since 2003) has met with prominent US politicians such as Rudy Giuliani, John Bolton and the late John McCain. An annual conference hosted by the MEK in Paris regularly draws visitors from various right-wing European political parties.

Despite this support, the group has next to no credibility in Iran, according to Houchang Chahabi, an Iranian-born professor of international relations at Boston University.

“They have been politically irrelevant in Iran since at least the mid-1980s, and have little to no domestic support,” says Professor Chahabi.

This raises the question of why Albania of all countries would drag itself into one of the world’s most tense geopolitical standoffs, between the United States and Iran, by agreeing to host a tiny, fanatical armed group, which until 2012 was designated as a terrorist group by the United States and most of the European Union.

Now described by various sources as a cult, a cartel, a dangerous extremist group, the group’s presence may even represent a threat to Albanians.
From revolutionaries to cult

MEK was founded in the 1960s by radical students opposed to Shah Reza Pahlavi. With an ideology combining Shia Islamism with Marxism, throughout the 1970s the group staged dozens of often suicidal attacks on security forces, as well as targeting western-owned hotels, airlines and oil companies.

During the 1979 revolution, they were crucial in the final gun battles against the Shah’s police. However, it did not take long for things to sour between the various factions involved in the revolution. The Ayatollah Khomeini-led Islamist faction ended up seizing most of the political power.

Following massive street protests organised by the MEK, the Islamic Republic cracked down hard on the group, executing thousands of supporters and driving many to flee across the border to Iraq, where they were hosted and armed by Saddam Hussein.

Tens of thousands MEK members participated in the Iran-Iraq War, fighting alongside the Iraqi military which was indiscriminately bombing Iranian cities and using banned chemical weapons. This caused what credibility they had left in Iran – and clearly they used to have a lot, as evidenced by their massive support during the revolution and the post-revolutionary period – to dissipate.

An attempted incursion into Iran in 1988 by an 8,000-strong mechanised MEK force, at the closing stages of the Iran-Iraq War, ended in crushing defeat. The group began resembling more of a cult than a political party – the 1988 defeat was partially blamed on members being too distracted by “trivialities” like love, friendship and parenthood to be zealous enough fighters.

Throughout the 1990s, MEK helped Saddam Hussein brutally quell uprisings in the aftermath of the first Gulf War, implicating themselves in some horrendous atrocities, particularly against Kurds.

Following the toppling of Saddam Hussein in 2003, the MEK began piquing the interest of US hawks. It had toppled hostile regimes in Iraq and Afghanistan with ease, and the insurgencies which would end up bogging it down had yet to fully take off. It was widely believed that Iran would be the next country on the list – and the MEK looked like convenient on-the-ground partners.

However, events in Iraq took an unanticipated turn. The country’s post-Saddam government forged closer ties with Iran, particularly under the leadership of Nouri al-Maliki. Between 2009 and 2013, Iraqi security forces raided MEK compounds multiple times, killing over 100 members.

This alarmed the MEK’s western sponsors which began looking for alternative countries to base the group in. They reached out to several of their Eastern European partners, with Romania identified as an ideal location. However, only one country responded to the request positively: Albania.

MEK officially renounced violence and between 2013 and 2016, between three and five thousand members were relocated to Albania, with the help of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), overseen by the governments of Sali Berisha and Edi Rama.
Violation of sovereignty?

Few even within Albania know of MEK’s existence. Those that do have asked questions about the implications of hosting such a group: fears were raised that the presence of the MEK forces Albania to inherit a decades-long struggle between a major regional power in the Middle East and a terrorist group with cult-like characteristics, at the behest of the United States.

However, Professor Olsi Jazexhi, an Albanian historian and lecturer at the International Islamic University of Malaysia, believes that there is little immediate security threat to Albania as a result of the group’s presence.

“Iran has attacked MEK terrorists in the past in Iraq, however at present it cannot do anything against MEK in Albania. Albania is a NATO member country and its security is guaranteed by the Americans,” he says.

Dr Zijad Bećirović, director of the International Institute for Middle Eastern and Balkan Studies in Ljubljana agrees with this view.

“Iran does not attach much importance to this group. Albania is a member of NATO and Iran would not want to risk a confrontation,” Dr Bećirović tells Emerging Europe.

This may be particularly true in light of how MEK renounced violence as a precondition of its relocation to Albania. Now, according to interviews conducted by The Guardian with MEK defectors, members spend most of their time posting propaganda comments on online forums demonising the Iranian government.

Furthermore, the group appears to have fallen far from its heyday as one of the trailblazers of the Iranian revolution to becoming something not unlike a cult.

Members are forced to divorce their spouses upon joining. Celibacy is strictly enforced, and daily, members have to confess their sexual urges in front of their peers. Dozens of women have allegedly been sterilised by the group’s doctors under false pretences, presumably to sever them from “distractions” such as raising children.

Dr Bećirović believes that the US clearly played a major role in bringing the group to Albania.

“Albania is a reliable ally of the United States. This was also shown in how Albania hosted prisoners of war from Afghanistan captured by the United States. It is quite certain that the MEK would not have come to Albania without the mediation or role of the United States.”

However, despite this, Bećirović acknowledges that Albania also has its own interests in hosting the MEK. “In this way, Albania strengthens its role in the region and international relations and its position with the United States and western allies.”

—
‘The US runs Albania’

Others, like Olsi Jazexhi, see the whole situation as evidence of American hegemony over Albania.

“Albania today is ruled by the US embassy in Tirana. The embassy vets our politicians – like the Guardian Council in Iran – and it decides which politicians enter parliament or not. The hosting of MEK in Albania is not an Albanian affair, but an American-Israeli affair.”

However, lately, the MEK has been back on the Iranian government’s radar. In November 2020, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, a senior official in Iran’s controversial nuclear programme, was assassinated. Some local news reports indicated that over 60 people were involved in the assassination.

Iranian government sources blamed the assassination on MEK, acting in conjunction with Israeli intelligence agency Mossad. The unconfirmed reports of there being several dozen people involved in the operation indicate a high level of collusion between locals and the architects of the assassination. MEK has demonstrated its members’ zeal, fanaticism, and willingness to collaborate with enemies of Iran – it would not be preposterous to suggest that they may have played a part in the killing.

The incident also echoed how during a string of assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists from the late 2000s to the early 2010s, the Iranian government persistently claimed the involvement of MEK sleeper cells.

Regardless of whether or not the MEK were involved in the assassinations, it is clear that they have been identified as the United States’ partner in Iran, should anything happen between the two countries.

This, however you slice it, means that the group is actively collaborating with a country that has been persistently hostile to Iran for over four decades.

And that means that as long as tensions remain between the US and Iran, MEK will continue to be useful to its patrons – meaning Albania will continue hosting them.

“Albania will continue to host the MEK paramilitary base on its soil for as long as the Americans need them to,” says Olsi Jazexhi.

“If one day the United States makes peace with Iran, MEK will be forgotten, dismantled, de-radicalised and its remaining members will finally live a peaceful civilian life. But for the time being they are useful and good terrorists which Albania must host.”

August 11, 2021
Christian Mamo

Albania and Iran’s dissident MEK: A marriage made in the US

October 25, 2022 0 comments
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Israel ambassador Galit Peleg and Maryam Rajavi
Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

Albanian media: Israeli ambassador meets with MEK terror group head

Albanian media reveals that a public and official meeting took place between the Israeli occupation’s ambassador and the head of the MEK terror organization, Maryam Rajavi.

Albanian media outlets reported on Tuesday that a public meeting took place between the Israeli occupation’s ambassador to Albania and the Head of the anti-Iran MEK terror group, Maryam Rajavi.

Tiranaweb.al revealed that the Israeli ambassador to Albania, Galit Peleg, met with Rajavi during the former’s trip to southern Albania. During the meeting, the two discussed how to develop cooperation between the Israeli occupation and the MEK.

Israel ambassador Galit Peleg and Maryam Rajavi

a public meeting took place between the Israeli occupation’s ambassador to Albania and the Head of the anti-Iran MEK terror group, Maryam Rajavi.

The Israeli ambassador’s meeting with Rajavi, according to the report, was in response to the latter’s presence at the Israeli Embassy at the Jewish New Year celebration on Monday, September 27.

Earlier in September, Albania’s Prime Minister Edi Rama accused Iran of directing an alleged cyberattack against Albanian institutions on July 15 in a bid to “paralyze public services and hack data and electronic communications from the government systems.”

The US vowed support to Albania in the aftermath and sanctioned Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence, as well as the intelligence minister, while “Israel” offered Albania its assistance against the alleged cyber attacks.

Albania hosting MEK terrorist group

It is noteworthy that for years, Tirana has been hosting the People’s Mujahedeen of Iran (MEK), which Iran considers a terrorist group.

Albania agreed in 2013 to take in members of the group at the request of Washington and the United Nations.

The MEK regularly hosts summits in Albania that have long attracted support from conservative US Republicans, including former Vice President Mike Pence who delivered a keynote address at an event in June.

Albania has expelled a string of Iranian diplomats from the Balkan country over the years, including Tehran’s ambassador to the country in December 2018.

By Al Mayadeen English

October 22, 2022 0 comments
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Iran International
Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy forceSaudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia funds Iran International TV

Since the beginning of Al Salman’s reign over Saudi Arabia in 2015, the country has been seeking to establish media networks to hurt countries opposing its policies in the region.

Saudi Arabia which sees Iran as the key factor in its failures in the region from Syria and Iraq to Yemen has been using all tools to hurt Iran since 2015, according to Iranian official newspaper “Iran”.

Therefore, various media outlets and news networks with a fully anti-Iran approach were launched in different countries after 2016, from which Iran International is an example.

Iran International

Iran International TV

Iran International is a network formed by Saudi Arabia in 2017 in London and adopts a completely anti-Iran approach.

Owner of Volant Media Ltd which runs Iran International is a Saudi man, named Adel Al-Abdulkarim.

Al-Abdulkarim has a long record of cooperation with individuals and companies in Saudi media and newspapers.

One of the staff members of Iran International has revealed that the network’s stories are influenced by some anonymous investors.

According to the British newspaper The Guardian, Saudi Arabia has provided a 250-million-dollar fund for Iran International in 2018.

The British weekly The Economist revealed that the investors of Iran International are Saudi nationals.

Also, the American newspaper the Wall Street Journal reported that individuals in Saudi Arabia have established and funded Iran International in order to compete against Iran’s influence in the region.

The Guardian says that former royal advisor Saud al-Qahtani who was fired after the 2018 murder of the Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi is one of the under-the-curtain financial supporters of Iran International.

“… Saudi Arabia shows zero tolerance for criticism of its absolute monarchy, as underlined by Khashoggi’s murder, it is setting up media organizations in other languages promoting free speech, particularly about Iran,” the Guardian has reported.

Massoud Khodabandeh, former member of Mujahedin-e-Khalq Organization (MKO), disclosed some issues about the anti-Iran news network in an interview about two months ago.

According to Khodabandeh, Iran International is not an unknown network because its owner and its company had already been broadcasting the MKO programs.

Iran International has been established to be the MKO language, he noted, adding that the MKO session was covered live through Iran International two years ago.

For years ago, Iran International gave its tribune as an amateur move to the terrorist group who killed people in southwestern Iranian city of Ahvaz in September 2018.

Although Iran International claims that it has no links with Saudis, its financial resources reveal that Saudi Arabia financially supports the network to follow Saudi regional policies.

October 22, 2022 0 comments
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MEK self immolation
The cult of Rajavi

Fanatical to the Point of Suicide; Mujahedin-e Khalq

The day after the police operation against the People’s Mojahedin in the Paris suburbs, European and world public opinion were shocked to discover individuals voluntarily turning themes into human torches.
What level of fanaticism could push seemingly sane and healthy people to such extremes? Moreover, some of the “spectators” tried lock the access of rescue services which could have saved the victims’ lives. The French judicial system could only note the facts prevent any repetition.

‘Two Iranians suspected of preventing the intervention of rescuers while a woman was immolating herself in front of DST headquarters in Paris on Wednesday will be brought before an instructional magistrate for their a criminal investigation, judicial sources made known on Friday.

self immolation

The prosecutor’s office stated that very day a criminal enquiry possible ‘obstruction of rescue services’ and ‘provocation to suicide’. It will soon demand an arrest warrant. The crime of obstructing rescue efforts can be punished with up to 7 years in prison.

The two prisoners bought 8 litres of petrol in a service station in rue Nelaton, near the DST HQ. They then provided it to an Iranian woman who died yesterday in the specialized military hospital for burns, Percy, in Clamart (Hauts-de-Seine), the same source added. One of them was an obstacle to rescue workers when they tried save the 44 year old victim, while the other was in possession of the victim’s blouse and papers, judicial sources emphasized.

The two Iranians were questioned by police Tuesday morning during the operation against the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran. They were released during the evening, the judicial sources said.
One Iranian woman, arrested and questioned on Wednesday was in possession of gasoline-filled bottles and a letter explaining her intention to commit suicide. She was freed, she stated”.

MEK members self immoation

photo: The raid of the MEK’s Paris compound in 2003, which prompted acts of self-immolation by some of its members.

This is the point to begin asking some difficult questions. For many years, specialists on international terrorism, like the experts on post-revolutionary Iran, have been aware of the sectarian and violent nature of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran. Numerous journalists have had a bone to pick with their propaganda. Those who gave space to the Movement’s “deserters” or who expressed the slightest criticism were violently denounced as agents of Teheran, bought by the regime. But, in that Summer of 2003, reality hit.
Tom Heneghan of the British press agency, Reuters, asked himself if he was watching a sect in full collapse:
“The images of men and women spraying themselves with petrol before setting themselves on fire in the streets of several European capitals, has shed dramatic light on the last days of the main armed opposition to the Teheran regime.

Since Tuesday, several supporters of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI) have tried to immolate themselves in Paris, London, Rome and Berne.
A woman in her forties has succumbed to her wounds Thursday night in the Paris region after immolating herself the previous day to denounce the intervention of French police against Maryam Rajavi — the person whom the Iranian opposition want one day to become President of Iran.

Successive student demonstrations in the streets of Teheran and the growing pressure of the American authorities on the Iranian regime, summoned to explain its nuclear programme, could have led the Mojahedin to believe that the time had come to overthrow the authorities they have been fighting for thirty years.
However in just a few weeks, the organization has seen its military installations dismantled in Iraq, its arsenal seized by the Americans and its HIQ in Auvers-sur- Oise, North of Paris, searched and closed down by the French police.

For many specialists on Iran, these images of men and women in flames, writhing in pain have shown the true nature of the PMOI: a sect based on the cult of personality of Maryam Rajavi and her husband, Massoud, one of the movement’s founders.

‘It’s a sect,’ says Ali Ansari, expert on Iranian affairs at Britain’s Durham University.
‘Their militants are strangely, passionately loyal to this couple. The now realise who they are,’ he adds.
‘My only hope, is that, in the event of a revolution, we won’t have the People’s Mojahedin in their place,’ confides a young Iranian interviewed in Teheran: ‘They’re worse than the mullahs’.

From the book: Autopsy of an ideological drift

October 19, 2022 0 comments
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MEK troll farm in Albania
The cult of Rajavi

Maryam Rajavi keeps her cyber army under systematic monitoring

Since the disarmament of the Mujahedin Khalq Organization by the US military in 2003, the group has been focused on a cyber warfare against the Iranian government. The war includes cyber attacks on computer systems and a disinformation campaign based on fake accounts in social media. The rank and file of Maryam Rajavi are actually soldiers of the cyber army that once was the actual army of Rajavi to launch terrorist acts. In the cult-like structure of Rajavi’s army, members are always under supervision by different layers of the hierarchy.

In 2013, when the group was relocated in Albania, it started building its headquarters in Manez, North of Tirana. The group leaders built equipped halls with hundreds of computer systems connected to the Internet in order to launch fake news. In April, 2021, Facebook removed hundreds of fake accounts linked to the MEK’s “troll farm” in Albania. According to the Associated Press, “the accounts posted content critical of Iran’s government and supportive of Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, a dissident group known as MEK. In many cases, the Facebook and Instagram accounts used fake profile names and photos.”

MEK troll farm in Albania

MEK members working in the ‘Twitter troll factory’ in Manez Camp, Albania

However, the computer halls of the MEK’s troll farm are potential places to motivate members to defect the group regarding that members of the MEK are not allowed to have any access to the outside world. Mostafa Beheshti a recently defected member of the group speaks of the amplified monitoring on busy work days, like these days that protests go on in the streets of Iran and MEK agents are more active to launch misinformation about the actual protests high jacking the true demand of Iranian protesters.

“Large screens are hung on the wall of each computer hall,” Mostafa Beheshti told in interview with the Association for the Support of Iranian Living in Albania (ASILA). “The screens are connected to each persons’ computer. Commanders in the command room, security room and the room of top command of security of Camp Ashraf are able to monitor each member’s activities on his or her PC.”

Mostafa Beheshti interviews by Hassan Heyrani

Mostafa Beheshti in an interview with ASILA head

According to the testimonies of Mostafa, whenever there is an increase in the protests in Iran, security check and monitoring over members are eventually increased. “They are afraid that members use an opportunity and contact their families outside the camp. They are also afraid of any penetration in their group. They do not want any one from the outside world to know about their internal affairs.” However, there are always dissidents in the group who use various tricks to bypass the commanders’ monitoring system. cellphones do not have SIM cards
“At the time of protests, when connections rise, commanders confiscate members’ tablets or cellphones although their cellphones do not have any SIM cards,” Mostafa recounts. He states that the MEK’s rank and file are not allowed to use smartphones. He witnessed that the group supervisors would destroy the SIM card tray to prevent members from using it.

“The MEK leaders are obsessed with power in Iran but they are never representative of Iranians’ aspirations,” he told.

October 17, 2022 0 comments
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David Miller
Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

British sociologist sees hands of foreign terrorists in Iran unrest

The recent unrest in Iran has its roots in foreign terrorist organizations’ attempt to provoke people to pursue their own agenda, which is overthrowing the political establishment, a British sociologist believes.

David Miller told IRNA on Monday that some foreign elements who pursue their own geopolitical agendas fanned the flame of the recent protests in Iran to pursue a regime change policy.

“The first key thing is that the premise for the protests such as they are, has been a false story about the cause of death of a young Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini,” he said, adding, “It was said by certain sources that she was killed or murdered by the police, which isn’t the cause for death.”

David Miller

British sociologist; David Miller

As to the scenario made by foreign forces to wreak havoc in Iran, Miller noted that it was invented by sources who had a reason to invent such things, which is that they are connected to entities with specific geopolitical interests, especially the US, the Zionists, and the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MKO).

According to the expert, the reason that sparked the situation was a “deception,” which was invented because of geopolitical objectives.

You can see that some of the people are agents of foreign powers and agencies like the foundation of George Soros, which is dedicated to regime change in Iran, he noted.

The British thinker also stipulated, “If these were women’s rights demonstrations simply over the question of the compulsory hijab or similar issues; then, we would not have been seeing immediate attacks, including killings of police officers and Basiji, we would not have seen the systematic attempt to target ambulances, which of course are not for woman’s rights in Iran.”

He also referred to “the attacks on IRGC personnel,” adding, “That is not the act of a woman’s rights demonstration, that is the act of a foreign terrorist organization.”

“This is a clear sign, this is not a kind of internal opposition,” he said, arguing that “the internal opposition is not allowed to carry gun” and “engage in armed attacks on state personnel.”

Comparing the incident in Iran with the case of Chris Caba, 24-year-old, who was shot dead by armed police in Streatham Hill, the UK, Miller said that the African-British citizen’s death sparked protests, but mainstream media tried to introduce the protests as participation in mourning for Queen Elizabeth, while they were demanding justice for the murder case.

“There is a desperate need for Russia, for China, for Iran, and other countries to develop their own social media infrastructure,” he said, arguing that the existing social media platforms are instruments for Western appearance.

October 15, 2022 0 comments
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