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Massoud and Maryam Rajavi
Mujahedin Khalq Organization

A critical question on the MEK: Is it a traitor?

Many questions are asked about the Mujahedin Khalq Organization, its leaders and its background. However, the most important question on the group seems to be this one: Are the MeK (Mujahedin-e Khalq) traitors to their country?

The answer short answer is: “Yes, they are” but the explanation is crucial because it will clarify many other facts on the group through its history.

Traitor to its own country

The MEK’s leader, Massoud Rajavi took Saddam Hussein’s side during the Iran-Iraq war, a war the Iranian did not initiate and which ended up killing millions of their brothers and sisters in the most horrific way. Rajavi thought Saddam would win and opportunistically presented his cult-like group as the opposition in the hope that once defeated, he could play a role in the new, enslaved, Iran.

After the end of the war, the MEK leaders betrayed Iran again and again. They launched the deadly “Forough Javidan” operation against their own countrymen in which a large number of both sides were killed.
Since then and during the nuclear deal they have always been in line with sanctions against Iran. The Rajavis and their mates are absolutely traitors to their people and country. ALL Iranians including nationalists, religious, educated, uneducated, men, women, EVERYBODY detests them.

Maryam Rajavi tries to represent a misleading flag for progress to a few young inexperienced Iranians who do not know that she is on the payroll of the CIA and Saudi Arabia. However, the majority of the Iranian public realize that the MEK are the worst traitors that Iran has ever seen in its history.
Hell is too nice of a place for Maryam and Massoud Rajavi and what they did to the Iranians is unforgivable. Massoud Rajavi and his cult of personality, the MEK, have committed many crimes against Iran. Examples include:

Massacring Iranian civilians during the 1970s and 1980s
Betraying Iran and fighting for Iraq, and participating in cross border operations against Iran, as Saddam’s private army, during the Iran-Iraq War.
Sending their agents to assassinate Iranian nuclear scientists under the order of Israel’s Mossad
Making speeches against Iran in front of American and international leaders; encouraging them to pressure the Iranian nation by imposing sanctions
Holding PR media events with well-paid Western warmongers who lead aggressive policies against Iran, such as John Bolton, Mike Pompeo and Mike Pence
Organizing troll farms on Twitter and other social media, with MEK bots posing as ordinary Iranian civilians, and tweeting hashtags demanding for increased economic sanctions and military invasion on Iran, and worse, claiming that most Iranians support and appreciate sanctions

Traitor to its own members

In brief, the MEK is undoubtedly a traitor to Iran. However, it is a traitor to its own members too. Reports on human rights abuses currently committed in the MEK’s headquarters in Tirana, Albania, indicate that the rank and file of the group are today the main victims of treason. The group authorities even betrayed their own members who dedicated their entire life to the group’s cause. Members of the MEK are deprived from the most basic human rights.
Today, the MEK is extremely unpopular among Iranians. It is hated by both pro-Iranian govt people and anti-Iranian govt people. Basically, everyone in Iran hates them. The Iranians still haven’t forgotten about it and probably never will. Thus, the group is not regarded as threat to the Iranian community but it is a substantial threat to its own members. The international community and the Albanian government should be aware of the violation of human rights taken place against the MEK members –better said hostages. The human rights bodies should take necessary actions to stop Massoud and Maryam Rajavi’s betrayal against their own members.

Mazda Parsi

June 26, 2022 0 comments
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Amir Parvizi
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Amir Parvizi’s family ask for help from the UN Secretary General

Mr. Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations

Your Excellency,
Greetings and politeness: One of the most important tasks of the United Nations, as a global and human rights body, is to ensure the inherent security and dignity of all human beings on the planet. In this regard, we draw your attention to the deplorable situation of the members of the Mojahedin- e Khalq organization who are stationed in Albania under the supervision of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees. One of our family members, Amir Parvizi, has unfortunately been deceived by the elements of the MEK as a destructive cult. Amir is enslaved in the group for more than 20 years.

Due to severe and exhausting pressures at the MEK camp, Amir Parvizi has recently decided to escape the group’s camp in Albania, Manza called Ashraf 3, and even managed to escape. Unfortunately, Maryam Rajavi, in violation of international law, deceived the Albanian police chief with a false claim of mental illness, persuading the Albanian police to arrest Amir and getting him back to the group’s camp. The Albanian police cooperated with the MEK and handed Amir Parvizi over to them. The Albania police did this without the slightest investigation while violating the rules of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.
Despite all the efforts that have been made so far, we have not been allowed to know about Amir’s latest conditions and well-being. Maryam Rajavi, the group’s leaders has ordered Amir to be under full control and he is not allowed to contact his family.The group published some notes under the name of Amir to deceive the public opinion.

Your Excellency,
Amir Parvizi’s safety and life is in grave danger. We desperately ask you to intervene immediately and facilitate our contact with Amir.
Thanks in advance,
Amir Parvizi’s family,
Zanjan-Iran

June 26, 2022 0 comments
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the MEK child soldiers
The cult of Rajavi

The Fate of Child Victims of Mujahed Parents in the MEK

Political ideologies can easily influence people’s daily lives. In the contemporary history of Iran, the topic of politics has been constantly remained trending both in the news and in daily conversations of people and eventually their lives. With parents as their kid’s role models, they hold the biggest impact in their children’s lives. Children show a tendency of picking up behaviors, words and phrases that they hear from people around them. Since kids are easily influenced by their parents, they are likely to repeat what their parents say and believe. As an extremist violent movement, the Mujahedin_e Khalq has worked in such a way that its children have been more involved in their parents’ political activities than any other political movement.

No opportunity for MEK children to learn

Experts believe that children should not be restricted from learning and exploring different political beliefs on their own. However, children of Mujahed parents grew up in the MEK’s headquarters in Camp Ashraf, Iraq where they were not exposed to any political and ideological belief except that of Rajavi’s Cult. Living in dormitories under the command of Mujahed teachers (or trainers) who ordered them to bow to the photos of Massoud and Maryam Rajavi chanting songs to glorify them.
People typically should spend a lot of time researching and educating themselves on political principles before they decide which party and beliefs they want to be identified with. When it comes to young children, they aren’t old enough to understand the importance of this process. In the MEK, this process was simply omitted. The children were just thrown in the ideological trap made by Massoud Rajavi.
Some of these children were never allowed to think twice about the beliefs their parents hold and the MEK commanders want them to hold. On the other hand, there have been some MEK-born children who managed to find an opportunity to explore different political ideologies. The children of Massoud and Maryam Rajavi the leaders of the group symbolize these two groups.

MEK Militia

Ashraf Abrishamchi and Mohammad Rajavi, two opposite fates

Mohammad Rajavi the son of Massoud Rajavi could find his way to the world outside his father’s cult of personality but Ashraf Abrishamchi, the daughter of Maryam Rajavi is still in the MEK’s system in her early forties. As a gift to her devotion to the group, she has been elevated in the group’s cult-like hierarchy. She has recently been entitled as the deputy assistant of the MEK secretary general.

Social media is likely one of the first ways children are exposed to the world of politics. While there certainly is biased media, children are able to learn and understand more about political issues through various platforms. That’s why Mohammad Rajavi started speaking out against the MEK a few years after he left the group.
Nevertheless, Ashraf Abrishamchi seemingly has never been allowed to access the outside world. She is the daughter of a father (Mehdi Abrishamchi) who handed his wife (Maryam Qajar) to Massoud Rajavi in order to marry him as the ideological husband! The parents of Ashraf were themselves so manipulated by Massoud Rajavi that they could never teach their daughter different political opinions and give her the opportunity to form her own opinions, rather than forcing their political beliefs onto her.

six deputy leaders named by Zahra Merikhi

Vahideh Nabavi (34) Shiva Mameqani (40) Maryam Rezaei (30) Zahra Merikhi (62) Sepideh Pourtaqi (40) Azar Akbarzadegan (39) Ashraf Abrishamchi (39)

Like her parents, Ashraf was manipulated by the cult of Rajavi too. Like many other child victims of the MEK, she became a child soldier of the MEK’s army. She was coerced to wear military uniform when she was a teenager; she was trained to use arms and military vehicles and she was taught bombing and grenade launching techniques.

Mohammad Rajavi alias Mostafa

Mohammad Rajavi alias Mostafa

Mohammad and many former child soldiers of the MEK finally got determined to leave the MEK and to choose for their future. They began to state their political views years after they left the group. Politics is such a wide subject and can be difficult to understand, which is why children deserve to be taught about politics in an unbiased manner. Today there are a lot of former child soldiers of the MEK who live across the world holding different political views although they began to think and choose for their political views in their late thirties or forties but it is never too late.

The right to choose for you own, unprecedented in the MEK

Indeed, children of the MEK were allowed to choose for their place of residence, their clothing, their hair model, their field of education, their job etc., only after they left the MEK. Adolescents deserve the opportunity to follow what they personally believe in but former child soldiers of the MEK paid a huge price to gain such a freedom to choose for their own.

Normally, Children should not be expected to inherit their parents’ political expectations, nor should they be disregarded for having their own ideas. Parents should be loving and accepting despite whatever beliefs their children take on, even if it doesn’t align with their own but most of the MEK’s child soldiers were labeled as traitors by their own parents just because they said no to the Massoud Rajavi.

To sum up, politics is a growing topic in the world around us. People of every age deserve the opportunity to formulate their own beliefs, and hold back their own opinions without being forced to follow specific ideologies. However, in the Cult of Rajavi, not only children, but also their parents are not permitted to question the group’s attitudes. Criticizing the group’s ideology just launches you to the opposite side, the enemy. As soon as you start questioning, you are regarded in the side of the Iranian government even though you have been living your whole life inside the group’s camps.

Mazda Parsi

June 22, 2022 0 comments
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Parviz Heydarzadeh
Former members of the MEK

Heidarzadeh: the MEK are like dinosaurs in Iran

Parviz Heidarzadeh, former member of the Mujahedin-e Khalq left the group after it was relocated in Albania in 2016. He lived independently in Albania for five years and he returned to his family in north of Iran, a few months ago. He spoke on the MEK’s cult-like suppressive atmosphere, in a meeting with a group of families of members of the MEK who are still mentally and physically banned under the group’s propaganda and cult system in Albania. “The MEK’s propaganda about its public support in Iran is totally false,” he said. “They are like dinosaurs here. They are extinct. The youth do not know them at all.”

Heidarzadeh emphasized that the determination to leave the MEK system requires courage. He said, “I just advise my ex-comrades in the MEK not to be afraid of the group’s disinformation about the outside world. Just make your mind and release yourself.”

Parviz Heydarzadeh

Parviz Heydarzadeh

About the atmosphere ruling the Cult of Rajavi, Heidarzadeh stated, “Members are forced to work hard. Under severe forced labor, they never find a chance to think about their families. At night, they are so exhausted that they are not able to think of their own personal affairs.”
He explained about the conditions of MEK members in the Albanian territory, “Members are ordered to spy on each other. They have to report on their peers to the group’s commanders. If they see other defectors in the streets of Tirana, they will not be allowed to talk to them, instead they have to report everything they saw to the group.”

Parviz Heydarzadeh

Regarding the families of MEK’s hostages, Heidarzadeh emphasized that in contrast with MEK members, families have access to all human rights bodies and international organizations. He told families, “You can take many actions in order to liberate your loved ones from the MEK; you can write letters, you can contact the International community to call for aid.”

According to Parviz Heidarzadeh, the MEK is in decline. “The group’s youngest members are in their forties,” he said. “No new generation has been born in the MEK in the past years. The youngest members who were children of Mujahed parents left the group immediately after it was settled in Albania. Thus, The MEK leaders are just making efforts to maintain the current forces.”

June 21, 2022 0 comments
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Amir Parvizi
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Amir Parvizi’s family call on the Albanian prime minister for help

According to the sources in Albania, Amir Parvizi’s attempt to escape the Mujahedin-e Khalq was obstructed by the group’s fraudulent collaboration with Albanian Police. His family from Zanjan, Iran took action to protest against the MEK’s suppressive attitude against Amir.

Amir Parvizi who wanted to flee the group under the cover of a doctor’s appointment in a hospital in Tirana was arrested by the Albanian Police and handed over to the MEK. The MEK commanders have forged documents to convince the police that Amir suffers mental disorder.

Amir Parvizi

Amir Parvizi

Amir’s family are seriously concerned about his life-threatening condition. His brother has published a video message asking the Albanian Prime Minister to immediately intervene in the case of Amir. He stated that the Albanian government is responsible for the consequences of the MEK’s inhumane attitude toward Amir.
Amir Parvizi joined the MEK in Iraq, in 2006 when he was 26 years old. He has not been allowed to leave the group until now that he is 43.

June 19, 2022 0 comments
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MEK Cult
The cult of Rajavi

Khodam Golmohammadi collapsed under suppression of Rajavi’s cult

Khodam Golmohammadi was from Azarbaijan, Iran. He was taken as a war prisoner in the Iran-Iraq war in which he was a soldier of the Iranian army. The Mujahedin-e Khalq recruiters in Iraqi POW camps succeeded to convince Khodam to join the group. However, the suppressive cult-like system of the group made him regret his decision after a short time but he had no way out.

In 1995, Massoud Rajavi declared that “exit is forbidden”, so Khodam and many other dissident members had to stay in the Cult of Rajavi. In 1999, he was injured in a clash between the Iranian border guards and the MEK forces. He was hospitalized for about a year. When he got back to his unit, he was not able to walk well. He was under too much physical pressure in the Katyusha unit. Thus, in 2001, he asked the group leaders to allow him to leave.

His demand was not only ignored but also, he was repressed for his willingness to leave the MEK. “His direct superior, Hamid Adham, even did not accept Khodam’s written request for exit,” Iraj Salehi, former member of the MEK writes.

Once he declared his demand, the organizational and peer pressure began against him. He became the subject the manipulation meetings where his commanders and peers shouted at him, humiliated and insulted him. Mohammad Reza Goli witnessed two of these suppression meetings. “He was awfully under tyranny,” Goli writes. “His commanders and some of his comrades were constantly insulting him, when I arrived in the eating place… The scene was so bad that I could not stand watching and I left the hall.”

The whole day, Mohammad Reza Goli was preoccupied with the scene he had seen. The next day he observed a similar act. “I heard a noise from the dormitory,” he recalls. “I got curious to know what was going on. I saw Khodam circled by a group of members who were bullying him. He just asked, ‘Is it a blasphemy that I want to leave?’ The scene was so heart-breaking.”

It did not take so long for members of the MEK to hear that Khodam set himself on fire in the parking of Camp Ashraf. “If I had not seen those sessions, I would not believe that Khodam committed suicide,” Goli writes. “I just believed his bitter fate when I recalled those scenes of mental torture.”

Iraj Salehi recounts the incident: “We got the news that some one was on fire in the parking. We rushed there for help. The MEK commanders, in particular Mashood Dianat, called Siamak, prevented us from getting close to the scene. He ordered us to get back and to keep silent about the incident.”

Khodam was taken to a hospital in Baghdad and he was not seen in the MEK, anymore. Years later, the rank and file of the MEK came to know that Khodam died in Baghdad. The location of his grave is not known. “Whether he was killed by the MEK agents or he killed himself, the Rajavis are responsible for Khodam’s death,” Salehi states.

June 18, 2022 0 comments
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Esmat Vatanparast aka mother Esmat
The cult of Rajavi

The day I realized MEK tortured my little daughter

Esmat Vatanparast called mother Esmat, defected the Mujahedin Khalq after she realized that the group agents tortured her small daughter. Mother Esmat was an active member of the MEK. She lost several members of her family for the group’s cause but once she found out that the group’s leaders are dishonest, she defected.
Jennifer, the youngest child of mother Esmat was a teenager when she was separated from her mother, kept in Camp Ashraf, Iraq where she was forced to obey the rules of the cult-like military system of the Mujahedin. “In the MEK’s school, my daughter faced a thousand issues,” Mother Esmat says in an interview with Siamak Naderi.

Esmat Vatanparast aka mother Esmat

Esmat Vatanparast

The MEK’s school in Camp Ashraf was a place to train hundreds of children of Mujahed parents under the ideology of Massoud Rajavi before they were separated from their parents and smuggled to Europe. Jennifer and her peers were under the horrendous training of a couple, Soheila and Rashid. “Jennifer still sees nightmares of Soheila and Rashid,” mother Esmat says. “They cut her ponytail with her scarf on it… She was beaten several times just because she had told her commander that she did not want to be a Mujahed.”

“Soheila threw pepper in the face of Jennifer because she was not able to fabricate lies about seeing Imam Ali in his dreams,” mother Esmat testifies about what her daughter endured in the MEK’s religious extremist cult. “If the kids said that they had seen Imam Ali in their dreams, teachers would give them a necklace as a gift!”

Mother Esmat was not informed about what was happening to her child and other children of the MEK until she heard some of them opening up. “When I was in Sweden, I was still active supporting the MEK,” she recalls. “That day, I had invited seven children of MEK parents, friends of my daughter. I went out for shopping and when I got back, I overheard them talking about their horrific memoirs under the rule of the MEK.”

Mother Esmat was shocked to hear those heart-breaking stories of teenagers whose parents had dedicated their whole life to Massoud and Maryam Rajavi. “Oh my God! What beasts we served! I asked myself,” she recounts. “They oppressed our own children this way.”

That teen party made Mother Esmat determined to defect the MEK completely. She stopped serving the group. Today, she blames Massoud and Maryam Rajavi as the main accountable personalities for her family’s misery.

June 15, 2022 0 comments
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scattered families
The cult of Rajavi

Deconstructing the Couple within the MEK

“Family, I hate you”. This citation from André Gide, the French author and 1947 Nobel Laureate can be described, with no exaggeration at all, as Massoud Rajavi’s motto. After all, the People’s Mojahedin sacrificed everything for their revolution.
In order for the individual to give himself up body and soul to the cause, the MEK intervened directly in its militants’ daily lives. This was to enforce the arbitrary decisions of the ‘Great Teacher’.
As Figaro reported:
“Founded on the cult of its spiritual leader, Massoud Rajavi and his wife, Maryam, the Mojahedin organisation has often been compared to a sect by former members, forced to divorce and break with their family to join the ranks of fighters”.

Mitra Yusefi

Mitra Yusefi , her husband and children

 

Mitra Yusufi, a long term member of the MEK, and a victim of this policy of enforced divorce, breaks the silence:
“I traveled a long road. I underwent a real brainwashing and I have to be alert all the time. The Iranian people detest Rajavi and I hate him. My story is simple. I was a young newlywed when it all started. My husband was a popular man; since he had played for the Iranian National Football team. This was the team that qualified for the World Championship in 1978 and played in Argentina. We were living in England when the revolution happened.
We returned to Iran before going to the United States. In the Eighties, we had heard bad news about things that happened to our friends. In fact, at the time, we were very cut off from the realities of Iranian society. Rajavi wanted to use my husband’s name. We agreed and we were moved to Greece to organize the movement. When Rajavi, after his divorce from Banisadr’s daughter married his comrade’s wife, Maryam, we were shocked. My husband then took a strong position, saying that you cannot take another’s wife. Two days later, though, they convinced us of the opposite.We were such fools…”.

Nadereh afshari

Nadereh Afshari

Nadere Afshari also lived inside the Mojahedin. She knows the reality:
“Rajavi used the family institution as an instrument at the service of his own power. To keep the men in the organisation, he forced them to marry. To do this, he used women as bait and ‘gave’ them to his most docile servants. Yet, at the slightest sign of disobedience, he took away their wives. Women were, therefore, objects passed from hand to hand.

Thus, a docile woman like Atefeh, who had the rank of Major, was forced to divorce four times, on the personal orders of Rajavi. Her comrade, Mahboubeh Jamshidi, divorced and remarried at least three times.
Rajavi considers the family as an integral cell in his organisation. He, therefore, feels free to intervene in the marital relations of members against their own will. The truth is that he dislikes the family which always posed a problem for his ‘regime’. This was for a very good reason: it is very difficult to keep ‘the light of love for the Leader’ burning bright.
From 1991 on, marriage changed its meaning. It became a barrier which kept the organisation’s members from loving their Leader”.

A third defector states:
“At this time, Rajavi also imposed on the leadership a fixed ceremony at the beginning of meetings: everyone had to place his hands on the table to make sure that no one was wearing a wedding ring, which he called ‘a slave ring’.”

Deconstructing the Family Of course, the MEK defended itself. The impact of these statements on its internal practices on international public opinion created a very negative impression. The National Resistance Council wrote, in its response to the American accusations:
“Further on, they claim that the Mojahedin had forced couples in Iraq to divorce and send their children to Europe and the United States. Here, it must be taken into account that the individuals who wrote this report were repeating, word for word, the allegations used by the Iranian regime and by the survivors of the Shah regime.
The National Liberation Army of Iran is based in the territory of a country where family-Iife in the camps became impossible during the unprecedented bombardments of the Gulf War and thereafter, because of the international embargo.

During the bombings, families, voluntarily and sometimes in writing, asked the organization for assistance in sending their children to Europe and the United States to live with their parents or our supporters. Despite many obstacles and risks, the movement spent millions of dollars to move these children to safe places. The alternative would have been accepting the possibility of numerous victims among them “.

The MEK children

The MEK children

The facts, however, are stubborn and the eyewitness reports are very precise:
‘in the terms of the ‘Second Ideological Revolution’, children had to be separated from their families and sent abroad. Rajavi made sure personally that this order was carried out case by case, finding militants or family members living in Europe or the United States who could take the children in. In the absence of family abroad, the children were sent to orphanages or special schools established by the Mojahedin in Germany and the Netherlands. More than 500 children were sent abroad this way: they were handed over to the organization during a special ceremony in which the parents recited a text affirming: ‘I give my child to Massoud and Maryam’.”

Yet the MEK justified itself by comparison with others:
“Moreover, this policy is not without precedent. During the Second World War, children were separated from their families and sent outside London during the bombings. If this way of doing things is unacceptable, the State Department should have published a declaration criticising Winston Churchill “. (219)
The People’s Mojahedin Organisation of Iran could have cited two other 20Ih Century precedents, ones more troubling indeed.

During 1936-37, the evacuation of the children of Spanish Republicans fighting Franco’s Nationalists is one. To protect them from the bombings which struck some cities very hard, especially Madrid, young girls and boys were sent by convoy to the Soviet Union. But once the Popular Front Government was swept aside and taken over by the Communists, these kids stayed in the USSR for an orthodox MarxistLeninist education.
The same scenario took place a few years later in Greece, during the civil war that immediately followed World War ii. There again, children kidnapped for the stated motive of putting them out of harm’s way remained in the USSR.

Kidnapping could also take place at home. The Hitler youth stole the minds and loyalties of children, turning them against their teachers and even their parents. The “Racially pure” S.S. breeding facilities were only a continuation of kidnap, but with the result of bringing thousands of parentless children into post-war Germany. Uprooted, far from their country and cut off from their culture, these children became wanderers without identity. They only had that given them by the movement or the organisation which took them in hand and led them where they wanted to for their own purposes.

For more than 20 years we know exactly how the MEK has used these kids: easier to lead, because they are more docile than adults who have developed their critical faculties. This included abandoning them to their fate when times went bad:
“In Evin, the model prison of Iran, built by the ex-Shah, one section is completely devoted to the ‘curables’, who undergo a reeducation programme. There, we find a certain number of inmates who discarded their former masters, like Banisadr’s embody guard. But the overwhelming majority are children. They are the ones the Mojahedin threw into the street fighting, without any military or political training at all. These kids (13-15 year olds) cracked, naturally. They turned against themselves”.

From the book: Autopsy of an Ideological Drift by Antoine Gessler, translated by Thomas R. Forstenszer

June 14, 2022 0 comments
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Ali Ekrami
Former members of the MEK

Ali Ekrami’s prison break, an account of escaping Camp Ashraf

Ali Ekrami former member of the Mujahedin Khalq recruited by a friend when he was a student of oil faculty in Abadan, south west of Iran. He left his hometown, his family and especially his sick mother behind to join the group in Iraq. After over 27 years of living under the rule of the Cult of Rajavi, Ali Ekrami decided to escape the group’s headquarters, Camp Ashraf, Iraq.

Following the collapse of the MEK’s main military and financial sponsor, Saddam Hussein, the group was disarmed by the US army. Ali Ekrami was already fed up with dishonesty, violence and suppression he was witnessing in the MEK. He was determined to escape the group but he was terrified because of the group’s disinformation about defectors and escapees of Camp Ashraf.

Ali Ekrami

Ali Ekrami

Nevertheless, he made his mind that night after reviewing his entire experience as an MEK member. “I was on my guarding post that night in one of the guard towers on the eastern side of Camp Ashraf when I came to a conclusion of my past life and I tried to find a way to break through that situation,” Ekrami writes in his autobiography, published a few months ago.

As Ekrami reviews his own involvement with the MEK, he also evaluates the MEK’s history including its armed struggle against Iranians, the escape of Massoud Rajavi from Iran, the marriage of Massoud and Maryam in Paris and their taking shelter under Saddam Hussein, the enemy at war with Iran. “It was like a nightmare,” he writes. “I had reached the point of complete hatred and disgust. I thought I did not have anything to do with the MEK any more. I was more determined to leave the group as any time I was before.”

Thus, he looked for an opportunity to escape the Cult of Rajavi. As a trusted member of the MEK, he was offered a new position. He was appointed as the MEK’s deputy to negotiate with Iraqi university professors. “I thought it would be a good opportunity to escape Camp Ashraf,” he writes. “I expressed my agreement, signed a form and got out to pack my bag.”

The next day, Ali Ekrami was supposed to move to the university. He got on the jeep that a friend of his was driving to go there. “In the way, I looked closely to find an American Hummer to surrender myself to them,” he says. “Luckily, I saw one in the street 100 of Camp Ashraf. This was the chance I have been looking for since months ago. I told my friend, ‘Stop the car! I feel nauseous and dizzy’.”

His friend stopped the car immediately and gave Ekrami a bottle of water. He took the bottle, splashed some water on his face and rushed to the American car. He recounts, “I knocked the wind shield. The American soldier opened the door. I told him, ‘I need help. I do not want to stay in the MEK. Help! Help!’ The black soldier and his commander took me on their car and drove fast to their camp. My friend was shocked staring at me getting far from him and Ashraf.”

Looking back, Ali Ekrami started shouting, “Damn Ashraf! Damn the Mujahedin_e Khalq! Down with Rajavi! Down with fraudulent Rajavi! You betrayed the hope and trust of a generation.”

June 13, 2022 0 comments
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MKO terrorists attack exhibition on their crimes in Stockholm
Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

MKO terrorists attack exhibition on their crimes in Stockholm

Members of anti-Iran terrorist group, Mujahedin-e-Khalq Organization, have attacked the organizers of an exhibition held in Swedish capital of Stockholm on the group’s crimes.

The MEK terrorists slashed the banners with knives and splashed paint on them to hide their brutal crimes, while pelting the organizers with stones and eggs, in what was decried as a blatant affront to democracy and free speech, according to a report by Press TV, whose staff covering the event were also targeted.

According to Habilian, which organizes the exhibition on documents of Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization’s crimes, the notorious terrorist group had called on its elements in Sweden to get together tasked with slashing the exhibition on Thursday night.

MKO terrorists attack exhibition on their crimes in Stockholm

MKO terrorists attack exhibition on their crimes in Stockholm

Habilian added that the MKO elements attacked the organizers when they were busy hanging posters, banners, and documents, and tore apart a significant part of them.

While the organizers had gained the necessary permits to hold the event, the Swedish police failed to guarantee the security of organizers by their arriving in the scene late, allowing the terrorists to destroy a major part of the exhibition and assault the Press TV correspondent and his cameraman covering the exhibition there.

MKO terrorists attack exhibition on their crimes in Stockholm

the Sweden’s police beefed up security around the event

According to the Press TV website, the Swedish police finally had to arrest nine of the attackers following the confrontation and released an unspecified number of them afterwards. One of the organizers said some of the terrorists came back and resumed assaults despite police warnings.

MKO terrorists attack exhibition on their crimes in Stockholm

Swedish police finally had to arrest nine of the attackers

In response, the Sweden’s police beefed up security around the event.

The exhibition is held near the court where Iranian citizen Hamid Nouri is on trial based on the evidence provided to the court by the MKO.

June 12, 2022 0 comments
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