INSIDE THIS ISSUE
1. The MEK’s forbidden family bonds
Within the Ashraf camp in Albania, all that matters is how members serve the Mujahideen-e- Khalq (MEK) leadership. Family is considered a distraction from the directives of the leaders.
2. The MEK Illusion of “International Support”
Exposing the Exploitation of Retired Western Officials by the Cult of Rajavi In recent years, the terrorist organization Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), under the leadership of Massoud and Maryam Rajavi, has persistently attempted to create a false image of legitimacy by showcasing superficial links with Western officials..
3. Women in the MEK: Trapped, tortured, and silenced
The terrorist group Mojahedin-e-Khalq (MEK) may not consider its killing of over 23,000 Iranians a heinous act, nor its alliance with Saddam Hussein against Iran during the 1980s invasion. A member might even argue that these acts of terror and treason were committed in the name of a just cause. However, what the group would certainly never admit is its systematic abuse of its own members, especially the women it so desperately tries to portray as free and happy.
4. Mothers Protest against MEK’s presence in Durres, Albania
The demonstration, which took place right in front of the municipality of Durres lasted for an hour. Albanian mothers who are members of Nejat Society Albania distributed flyers to the public to enlighten them about the MEK’s inhumane actions, including not allowing mothers to visit their loved ones, not even receiving letters, opposing the Red Cross in this regard.
5. An Analysis on Massoud Rajavi
In his TEDx Talks, he states some facts about power-addict people. The criteria that he clarifies is dramatically compatible with Massoud Rajavi. According to Gabor, some people are addicted to power, to wealth and to acquisition because they want to make themselves bigger.
6. Grieves of a daughter of Mujahed parents
I have never been in the MEK for a single day. I was not among the Ashraf children. My mother was a member of the MEK before the 1979 revolution. She was one of the academic elites at
Tehran University who found her way into the group and dragged my father into this pit. She was arrested with my father in 1961. My father was released a year later and my mother two
years later, but they continued their activities. My mother’s family was generally part of the 1979 uprising in some way.
7. About Nejat Society
Nejat Society is a Tehran-based entity with offices across Iran and Europe that assists families seeking contact with loved ones in the MEK..