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Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

Brownback Applauds

Senator Sam Brownback is satisfied with Condoleezza Rice’s announcement of more money to support Iranian democracy:

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice asked Congress on Wednesday to provide $75 million in emergency funding to step up pressure on the Iranian government, including expanding radio and television broadcasts into Iran and promoting internal opposition to the rule of religious leaders.

Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., who has called for $100 million to promote democracy in Iran, applauded the initiative as the "absolutely right move at this point in time." While some Iranian activists have criticized the administration for moving too slowly to support them, Brownback said the administration had been "very methodical" in fighting terrorism. "The first step was Afghanistan, then Iraq, and now you’re seeing an increasing focus on Iran," he said.

Sounds a bit ominous to me. It is interesting to see how the administration did not throw their support behind the Brownback / Santorum bill but proposed their own solution. There could be two reasons for this. First, after Brownback’s criticism of Bush’s domestic spying the whitehouse may not be chomping at the bit to give Brownback positive recognition. Second, and perhaps more plausible, is that the House version of this bill includes language about sanctions that would anger many of our allies. By having Rice announce this plan the administration avoids having to push to have the controversial language removed.

Iran continues to get Senator Brownback in the media spotlight. As I have said before, I think this is a good move on his part and one that will make him appear to be a more legitimate candidate in 2008.

If you research this issue, you may revise your initial conclusions: 1. The sponsor of the Iran Freedom Support Act in the House of Representatives is Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, one of the strongest supporters of the Iranian Communist MEK (Rajavi Cult) terrorists.

The MEK has murdered American military officers, Rockwell International employees, and Iranian and Iraqi civilians.

 2. The leader of the MEK, Massoud Rajavi, is probably being kept by the American military in Camp Mercury, Iraq.  Please ask Senator Brownback to discuss this.

 3.   Approximately 4,000 MEK fighters are being held at Camp Ashraf, Iraq.  According to Justin Raimondo (Antiwar.com), these terrorists will be given political asylum in America.  If you and others who oppose Senator Brownback continue to publicize these developments, your disclosures will hurt Senator Brownback.

 4. There have been more than 300 co-sponsors of the Iran Freedom Support Act in the House of Representatives.  The supporters of the communist takeover of Iran by the Iranian Communist MEK (Rajavi Cult) terrorists could have passed this bill long ago.  However, the support has not been as strong in the Senate.  There has been a big fight within the Bush administration over the MEK.  Some in the State Department have been fighting correctly the neo-conservatives (neo-Trotskyites who claim to be former communists) over the issue of the Iranian Communist MEK (Rajavi Cult) terrorists.

 5. As a conservative Republican, I would never vote for any candidate of any party who supports the communist takeover of any country.

 6. Syrian opposition leaders have announced already that they will not accept any money from the American government.  No honest political leader in any country should accept such money.

 7. In 1996, Republicans condemned the Democratic National Committee and some Democratic Party candidates for accepting political campaign contributions from Communist China.  If it is illegal in America for politicians to accept political campaign contributions from foreign sources, then why is it proper for Americans to attempt to corrupt the political processes of other countries?

March 10, 2006

April 9, 2006 0 comments
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Former members of the MEK

Victims in the MKO

Report of Awaa Club’s Research Committee

According to tens of reports received by Awaa Club, and also according to the families of the victims, there are numerous occasions of suppression in the internal relations of the MKO.

Awaa started to study this case two years ago and conducted interviews on disappearance of a number of victims. In this regard, a letter was sent to Iraqi president Mr. Jalal Talabani, asking for his help in the field of investigating this case. Following this case, large number of reports and letters show that the suppression and disappearance of people in the MKO has a long history. Those who disappeared were the victims of suppression policies of MKO leaders.

The victims are tens of members who disappeared inside the MKO. The case was opened 2 years ago in order for the illumination of public opinion and it’s still going on. In this regard, we ask all informed Iranians, former members of MKO, and particularly the families of the victims to help us complete the investigation on this historical disaster by sending news, reports, photos, information and other documents to one of the addresses of Awaa Club.

Below is the first report of our investigations for the families, humanitarian workers and organizations and the media. It should be noted that more information will be published about each victim in the future.

Postfach 90 31 73

D- 51124 Köln

Tel: + 49 (0) 2203 92 53 692

Fax: + 49 (0) 2203 92 53 694

Mobil: + 49 (0) 175 639 1365

Mobil: + 49 (0) 163 184 9145

Email: aawa_association@web.de

 

The list of victims and missing people in the MKO

(The list is being completed)

Name Date of Death Type of Death How announced by MKO

 

1 Mojtaba Mirmiran 1988 Hanging Suicide

2 Homa Bashardoost 1993 Self-immolation Due to fire

3 Saeed Norouzi 2003 Suspicious US bombing

4 Mir Hussein Moosavi Yeganeh 1998 Suspicious No comments

5 Parviz Ahmadi 1994 By torture Martyrdom during clashes

6 Davood Ahmadi 1989 Hanging Suicide

7 Mohamad Reza Babakhanlou 1997 Self-immolation Due to illness

8 Aalan Mohamadi possibliy1998 Suicide Unintentional shooting

9 Ali Khoshhal 1995 Suicide Unintentional shooting

10 Jalil Bozorgmehr 1994 Suspicious No comments

11 Karim Pedram 1998 Suicide Unintentional shooting

12 Ali Naghi Haddadi 1994 Suspicious No comments

13 Farman Shafabin 1999 Self-immolation Unintentional shooting

14 Mohamad Eftekhari 1994 Self-immolation Fire accident

15 Ghorbanali Torabi 1994 By torture Military operation

16 Mohamad Talebdost 1989 missing No comments

17 Javad Dehghan 1981 Suicide Suicide

18 Mehdi Sharifi 1981 Suicide Suicide  

April 8, 2006 0 comments
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Netherland

MPs Censured for Using MKO’s Information

Dutch parliament criticized foreign and immigration ministries of Netherlands after being informed that these two institutions relied on the reports of the Mojahedin-e Khalq organization, which is listed by the US and EU as a terrorist organization.

The Parliament stressed that the ideology of this organization is not based on Islam but on weapons and assassination and that Netherlands consider that a terrorist group.

Netherlands Parliament emphasized that the decisions of the immigration ministry to return Iranian refugees were based on the reports of this organization.

In protest to these two ministries, Parliament asked for the interpellation of the ministers of these two institutions. It also declared that Netherlands should not rely on the information and reports of terrorists in dealing with foreign countries.

This wrong move by the ministers of Immigration and foreign affairs has put the government in a difficult situation and has brought the suspicion of Parliament about the accuracy of strategic information of the institutions. This comes at a time when Netherlands, along other European countries, is following Iran’s affairs particularly those related to nuclear programs.

Al-Vatan/Saudi Arabia

April 8, 2006 0 comments
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Nejat Publications

Pars Brief – Issue No.23

1.    Letter to the Canadian Minister of immigration

2.    Bulgaria Sends off Ashraf Guard Unit

3.    Camp Ashraf Escapee: Camp Ruled by Violence

4.    Mohsen Abbaslou – BBC Interview about Camp Ashraf

5.    Supporters of Endless Wars in Congress

 
Download Pars Brief – Issue No.23
Download Pars Brief – Issue No.23

April 5, 2006 0 comments
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Bulgaria

Bulgaria Sends off Ashraf Guard Unit

Bulgaria Sends off Ashraf Guard Unit At an official ceremony on Wednesday Bulgaria will send off its first non-combat unit to guard the Iraqi refugee camp of Ashraf.

Prime Minister Sergey Stanishev, Defense Minister Vesselin Bliznakov, army staff and defense officials, families and friends of the troops will attend the event in Kazanluk, south Bulgaria.

Bulgaria’s parliament approved the government decision to send up to 155 troops to guard the Iraqi camp of Ashraf, about 70 km north of Baghdad. The unit should stay in Iraq for a year.

The move came few months after Bulgaria decided to pull out its 450-strong light infantry unit from the Arab country. During the unit’s service, the country lost 13 soldiers and six civilians.

The new non-combat mission will cost Bulgaria approximately EUR 8 M.

Sofia News Agency –  March 29, 2006

April 3, 2006 0 comments
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Germany

Precaution against Mojahedin’s Terrorists Plots in World Cup

Sporting events and international competitions never fail to attract public attention for a variety of reasons. Hundreds of millions of people worldwide attentively follow sports competitions through the public media or as spectators. It is an accepted fact that international competitions have always eclipsed any prevailing political issues and it is also accepted that, because of their focal importance, any number of opportunist political movements, and even terrorist groups, take advantage of this circumstance to accomplish their sectarian or political objectives. The plotted acts, from both the militant and political point of view, bear repercussions long after the event itself and the subsequent propaganda blitz can engross public opinion. The 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, for instance, had an appalling, long-standing effect on people’s minds because of an armed, terrorist group’s hostage-taking. It ended after the hostages and terrorists were killed and history recalls it as the bloody Olympic Games.

Now nearly 34 years after that incident, Germany will again host the World Cup. The ongoing security measures indicate that Germans are alert to the possibility of any threats, and precautions are being made to neutralize even minute suspicious moves to prevent any repetition of the past nightmare; that is to say, learning from the past can come in handy today.

It cannot be altogether ignored that the Mojahedin Khalq Organization, MKO, are historical imitators of other armed, terrorist organizations, and should be listed among the first on Germany’s watch-list. Although the group has recently inaugurated a new policy of denying its past terrorist misdeeds, perpetuation of its ill-will and hostile propaganda minimizes the effects of its claims. At present, the group is doing its best to focus on public opinion to distract attention. The methods it utilizes are in some cases too horrible and violent to forget them easily. For instance, the scattered self-immolations in European countries after Maryam Rajavi’s arrest by French police coerced the French judiciary to release her to cease the practice of these barbaric, sect-like acts.

The Mojahedin are real experts in the practice of psychological warfare. The world should not dismiss doubts about the ability of its sympathizers to show vigorous agitation over Iranian attendance in international assemblies or wherever the nations come together on certain occasions. Among these, the World Cup games are the Mojahedin’s best opportunity. To refresh our minds, let us go through the details of Mojahedin’s activities during the course of the 1998 World Cup in France; made into a sensitive, full-attention grabbing sporting event by the presence of Iran’s national team.

Utilizing its usual mafia-like methods, the Mojahedin obtained a pile of tickets sold for the play offs of the Iranian team and distributed them freely among its sympathizers so that they would be in position to disturb the peace during the games. There is evidence that several of these pseudo-fans were arrested by French police on the allegations of causing disruption. Mahmoud Malek Afzali, son of an old, Iranian singer serving the Mojahedin, was seriously traumatized by Mojahedin agents during the

Iran-America game because of his objection to his mother’s association with the Mojahedin:

Mahmoud Malek Afzali, a dissident to Mojahedin and son of a famous Iranian singer who cooperates with the Mojahedin, was seriously injured in the face by Mojahedin agents during Iran-America play. [1]

Malek Afzali further disclosed that he and his companions, a number of Iranian singers residing in the US, who had come to watch Iran play, had to recurrently change their accommodation in Paris to escape Mojahedin’s persecution. [2]

A French daily also reported the apprehension of four Mojahedin sympathizers:

Four Mojaheds are in custody on charges of burning a flag and provoking people. According to AFP, four Iranian political refugees arrested on Saturday are still in custody. According to a French judiciary official, one of them, a Dutch citizen, is alleged to have burned the Iranian flag and the other three, coming from Canada and the US, were provoking people into acts of violence. [3]

In another report we read:

French police had banned people from carrying any banners and portraits except for Iranian national flags for the Iran-America game. The question is how they had smuggled the Mojahedin’s arms and portraits of Massoud and Maryam into the stadium.

No doubt they were carrying them under their clothes. An eye witness confirmed that once a French police asked the portrait bearers whose portrait they were carrying and they slyly answered they were Iranian football players! So the police let them carry the portraits. [4]

Also in New York, the Mojahedin caused disruption during the Iran-America wrestling competitions:

The US police arrested a Mojahedin sympathizer on charges of disturbing the Iran-America wrestling competitions last Sunday. The intruder had the competition halted for a few minutes. [5]

These events dispel any doubts that the Mojahedin will stay idle during the days when the Iranian team plays in Germany this year. The group has already orchestrated a vast psychological blitz opposing Iran’s presence in the World Cup, but it was hushed-up before making things worse for proposing so absurd, preposterous a demand. Structurally, the Mojahedin is an extremist, violent organization that ideologically believes in armed struggle. It masterminds violent measures with the provided professional expertise. Such operations are commonly followed by exaggerated maneuvering over the accomplished feat which fuels its propaganda machine for long afterward to be the focus of the public opinion.

Reports indicate that the Mojahedin is kicking off preliminaries to play its role in Germany. It is obtaining and purchasing bundles of tickets to distribute among its sympathizers and whoever consents to cooperate with them. It is a golden opportunity for the organization to bypass the political standstill it is mired in especially for the time being. The absence of Massoud Rajavi, revoking the asylum status of some members in Germany, its uncertain future and increasing number of defectors in Iraq, terrorist charges in France, and a lot more are all the crises the group is facing at the moment.

German authorities should be cautious about the threat of the Mojahedin. A terrorist group that has betrayed its own people, hardly ever respects the interests of other nations. Plotted turbulence and disorder, even on a small scale, may call into question Germany’s security capabilities followed by a backlash from public opinion that it does not trust Germany to host any other International competition. It is a responsibility for Germany, and whoever believes in peace, to maintain security during the World Cup football matches to squelch politically motivated moves that disturb the peaceful atmosphere of the internationally organized games.

Notes:

1- Nimrooz, No. 479, 30 June 1998, 3.

2- ibid.

3- Nimrooz, No. 478, 26 June 1998, 3.

4- ibid.

5- Nimrooz, No. 488, 31 July 1998, 4.

mojahedin.ws  –  Bahar Irani – April 12, 2006

March 30, 2006 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

MKO Members Settled in Saddam’s Palace

Security sources in southern Iraq reported that a number of MKO members being supported by US forces have been settled in Basra.

These MKO members (the number of whom is not clear) have been placed in former palace of Saddam Hussein in Basra and several US forces escort them.

British soldiers used to stay in the palace during past 3 years.

The settlement of MKO members in Basra occurs when US forces have come close to the Iranian border in Shalamcheh.

Earlier also, a number of MKO members were cooperating with British forces and Saddam’s Estekhbarat (secret service) on Iran; they trained terrorists to sabotage in Khuzestan province.

Fars News Agency

March 27, 2006 0 comments
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UK

MKO is Terrorist, UK Says

BRITISH MINISTER OF STATE FOR THE MIDDLE EAST EMPHASIZES THAT THE MKO IS TERRORIST.

Dr. Kim Howells answered the question of Patrick Mercer, conservative MP Member of Parliament for Newark and Retford, on UK’s stance toward MKO’s military capabilities.

"UK government put the MKO on terror list in March 2001," Howells said. "This list is reviewed and revised every two years, but there is no information on the MKO that can change its status," he added.

In recent months, a number of British politicians supporting the MKO, including Patrick Mercer and Lord Corbett, have tried to take the name of this group out of terror lists in UK, US and European Union. These efforts have failed to date.

IRNA

March 27, 2006 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

MKO’s Latest Terror Operation in Iraq

Members of the Mojahedin-e khalq organization, wearing the uniforms of Iraqi interior ministry officers and backed by US forces, took part in last week’s attack to Baghdad’s A’zamiah Sunni district.

Al-Bayenah Al-Jadidah newspaper wrote: "Security forces arrested a number of these people and realized that they were Iranians. In the investigations, they found that detained people belonged to the terrorist Mojahedin-e khalq organization.

A’zamiah in Baghdad witnessed clashes between armed men and popular forces last week.

IRIB News

March 27, 2006 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq 's Terrorism

Appeals court denies rehearing on terror indictments

SAN FRANCISCO

Seven Los Angeles area residents indicted on accusations of raising hundreds of thousands of dollars for a terror organization lost a federal court challenge in a bid to prove their innocence.

The seven wanted to challenge a determination by the State Department that a group they funded was a terror organization.

The seven allegedly provided money to the Mujahedin-e Khalq, which "participated in various terrorist activities against the Iranian regime" and "carried out terrorist activities with the support of Saddam Hussein’s regime," according to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The San Francisco-based appeals court in 2004 first ruled against the seven and on Monday let the decision stand without a rehearing.

A 1996 law makes it illegal to give money to organizations the State Department has linked to terrorism. Rarely used before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the law has since been used to win terror convictions.

The defendants claimed the law violated their First Amendment right to contribute money to groups they claim are not terror organizations, and they argued they should be allowed to prove the groups did not belong on the State Department’s list.

In 2002, U.S. District Judge Robert Takasugi invalidated the law, saying it did not provide the groups a proper forum to contest their terror designations.

On Monday, the 9th Circuit said those accused of supporting the listed groups cannot challenge the list. Lawyers for those indicted asked the appeals court to review the 2004 decision with a panel of 15 judges, which the San Francisco-based appeals court declined.

Judge Alex Kozinski voted to rehear the case, writing that determining whether an organization is engaged in terrorism is crucial. Kozinski said the prosecution in the case runs contrary to "two of our defining traditions," free expression and justice.

The Associated Press, Apr. 18, 2006

March 23, 2006 0 comments
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