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Mohsen fakhrizade
Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

Fakhrizadeh Terror – Israel – MEK – sabotage diplomacy

Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, a key Iranian nuclear official, has been assassinated in Tehran. While it’s unclear as of this writing who is responsible, Israel has assassinated numerous Iranian nuclear scientists in the past, but had, until now, been unable to get to the highly protected Fakhrizadeh.

Some Iranian reports claim it was a suicide attack, which would reduce the likelihood of Israeli operatives carrying out the attack, but the bullet holes in Fakhrizadeh’s car cast doubt on that.

Israel has in the past, however, used operatives from the the MEK — a cult-like Iranian exile group recently removed from the State Department’s list of terrorist organizations — to conduct attacks in Iran. The MEK was the first group to introduce suicide assassinations to Iran.

Mohsen Fakhrizade assassiniation

But Israel is a prime suspect for several reasons: It has the expertise and capacity, has done it before, and has a motive.

While it’s highly unlikely that Israel would have carried out the assassination without a green light from the Trump administration, a more direct U.S. role cannot be entirely discounted. The Trump administration has reportedly run several joint sabotage operations with Israel against Iran’s nuclear facilities in the past year and relied in part on Israeli intelligence in carrying out the assassination of Gen. Qasem Soleimani outside the Baghdad airport last January. Earlier this month, Trump himself reportedly raised the possibility of attacking Iran with his top national-security advisers, while it was just last week that the administration’s most prominent Iran hawk, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, well as leaders of Iran’s adversaries in the Persian Gulf, notably Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

In any event, conducting attacks in Iran has few downsides for Israel right now. Iran could lash out and spark a broader conflict that sucks in the United States, bringing about a U.S.-Iran confrontation that Netanyahu has long sought.

Or, if Iran sits tight to wait to deal with President-elect Joe Biden, the Trump administration is highly unlikely to impose any costs on other Israeli provocations.

Either way, the assassination (and other likely future attacks) will likely harden Iran’s position and complicate — if not ultimately cripple — the Biden team’s attempts to revive diplomacy. That serves Netanyahu’s interest as well.
ndeed, Tehran’s openness to post-JCPOA negotiations on missiles and other matters will likely diminish if Israel engages in renewed assassinations in Iran. In fact, the Obama administration condemned Israel’s earlier assassinations precisely because it knew the murders wouldn’t so much set back Iran’s nuclear program, as it would any efforts to negotiate a deal to curb it.

Assuming Israel’s responsibility and the Trump administration’s acquiescence, if not complicity, in additional Israeli provocations, we now find ourselves in a similar, but perhaps more perilous situation for the next two months — especially if Biden and his foreign policy team fail to strongly communicate that Israel will incur costs if it continues to carry out attacks inside Iran during the current interregnum.

As such, we should be prepared for a very bumpy ride pending Biden’s inauguration. And if it turns out that Israel was behind the assassination, there should be no illusions about Netanyahu’s desire to drag the United States into another endless war in the Middle East.

It’s also important that the American public take note of the broader pattern. From around 2002 to 2012, Israel pressed the United States to address Iran’s nuclear program. During that period, Washington obligingly imposed ever-tougher sanctions against Tehran and repeatedly threatened military action. But those efforts failed as Iran systematically built up its nuclear capabilities.

Then, from 2012 to 2015, the United States tried real diplomacy — along with the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Russia, and China — culminating in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), widely hailed as the most far- reaching non-proliferation agreement ever negotiated, and by which Iran agreed to sharply curb its nuclear program. Despite those constraints, Israel declared its opposition and successfully pressed the Trump administration to end U.S. participation in 2018 and impose new sanctions as part of its “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran.

Predictably, a series of escalations since then has brought the United States and Iran minutes away from war, twice.

But still, the war that many in Israel and in the United States have sought has yet to fully materialize. And now that Biden has defeated Trump, those who want war, particularly in Israel, likely see their window of opportunity closing. Meanwhile, Israel is coordinating with Trump, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates for a flood of new sanctions designed to, again, at a minimum to sabotage Biden’s chances of restarting diplomacy with Iran.

If Israel was behind the assassination of Fakhrizadeh — which seems highly likely though not yet proven — it demonstrates the degree to which Netanyahu feels emboldened to undermine Democratic U.S. presidents with impunity and drag the United States into war.

U.S. strategic partnerships should serve to make the United States more, not less, secure. But that is where we are today with many American partnerships around the world. This will not change unless and until Washington decides to end its drive for military hegemony in the Middle East.

Responsiblestatecraft

November 28, 2020 0 comments
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Alan Mohammadi
The cult of Rajavi

MEK and Children – Alan Mohammadi

She was only three years old when she lost her mother in the MEK’s operation against the Iranian border “Forough Javidan”. She was then sent to Europe in 1981 together with hundreds of other children of the MEK members. After ten years she was made to get back from Germany to Camp Ashraf, Iraq to allegedly visit her parents but actually to join the group’s so-called National Liberation Army.

Alan Mohammadi

Yasser Ezati who is also a child victim of the Mujahedin Khalq has some common memories with Alan from the time they were in Europe. “Alan was kept under severe mental pressure in the MEK’s residence in Koln, Germany,” he writes. “I remember that she used to scratch her fingernails on her hand to the extent of bleeding.

As a twelve-year-old girl she used to hang out with carefree nineteen-year-olds. I witnessed that she escaped from school. She started smoking by the age of eleven….” Yasser believes that Alan’s problems were caused by emotional deficiencies. “She did everything to fill her emotional holes,” he asserts.

Several defectors confirm that Alan did not like to stay in Iraq after he visited his father in Camp Ashraf. She asked the MEK authorities to let her get back to Europe so many times but each time they held brainwashing sessions to intimidate her to stay in the camp.

“She had requested to return to Europe, but she was faced with what is usual in the MEK,” Mohammad Karami a defector of the group writes. ”Several meetings were held for her. She was the subject of all brainwashing meetings called “Current Operation”. One day, I was driving to St. 100 in Ashraf, I saw Nasrin Masih the commander of Alan’s unit with two other women. They were beating Alan. She had kept her arms over her head to protect it from the knocks and kicks.”

Mental and physical tortures that was imposed on Alan by the MEK authorities finally resulted in her mental breakdown. She was 15 years old when she committed suicide and put an end to her life. Milad Ariaiee another defector of the group writes about Alan’s death: “In 2001, a unit of female members was charged with guarding the Eastern side of Camp Ashraf. The incident took place in the first watch tower…while her superior comrade had gone to bring food Alan used the opportunity to take her own life with her Kalashnikov.”

In a very detailed article about Alan, Nasrin Ebrahimi a female defector of the MEK writes: “Alan had a very disastrous life, from vagrancy in Kurdestan to homelessness in Europe. She had gone to the MEK’s school in Europe and had been adopted by a variety of Iranian and German families. She was abused as a child labor by the MEK both in Europe and Iraq. Rajavi victimized this 15 year-old girl for his own ambitions.”

November 26, 2020 0 comments
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Hossein pourabdollahi sister - Kerman -
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Pourabdollahi family complains to the UN Committee on Enforced Disappearances

Greetings and Regards
I am Fatemeh Pourabdollahi, the sister of Hussein Pourabdollahi. Hussein served in the army in 1986.

At that time, Iran was involved in the war with Iraq and Hussein was sent to war zones. There he was abducted and taken hostage by the MEK.

Hossein Pourabdollahi

In his letters to us, he expressed his nostalgia for the family and He wanted to return to his family as soon as possible. however the MEK cult kidnapped him and since then we have been deprived of seeing him now for more than 30 years.

Hossein Pourabdollahi letter to his family during the war

The MKO cult is currently based in Albania and does not allow us to have any contact with Hussein. We are completely unaware of him.

Due to the corona (Covid-19) epidemic in the world, we are worried about Hussein’s health. The Albanian government is not cooperating with us either. We want to contact Hussein and pave the way for his return to Iran.

Please help us in this regard according to your authority.

Thanks,
Pourabdollahi family
Iran, Kerman province, Rafsanjan
Phone number: +98 921 123 8644 , +98913 500 3085
Email: pourabdollahi.f@gmail.com

November 25, 2020 0 comments
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USA Terrorists
Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

MEK and Al Qaeda – US Terrorists in Iran

Killing al-Qaeda’s No. 2 Man Multiple Times and Using the IAEA Report as Excuse for Attacking Iran

Two recent reports are serious warnings to those who oppose the United States endless wars in the Middle East. The reports indicate that although President Trump has lost the elections, his efforts against Iran are continuing, and that he may be looking for an excuse to attack Iran in the last few weeks of his Presidency.

First, the New York Times reported on November 13 that Israeli agents assassinated Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah, whose nom de guerre is Abu Muhammad al-Masri, and was supposedly”al-Qaeda’s No. 2 man.”The assassination supposedly took place in an affluent neighborhood of Tehran on August 7, on the 22nd anniversary of the terrorist attacks on U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania on 7 August 1998 that killed 224 people and injured hundreds more. Al-Masri had been accused of masterminding the attacks. According to the report, al-Masri’s daughter, Miriam was also killed. Iran denied the report.

Rajavi - Al qaeda - Terrorists

The report surprised many, including this author, who follow the political developments in Iran and the Middle East. It has been known ever since the United States invaded and occupied Afghanistan in the fall of 2001 that a number of al-Qaeda operatives and even high-ranking officials, including relatives of Osama bin Laden, had escaped to Iran, had been arrested there, and had been either jailed or were kept under house arrest. In 2003 Iran proposed to the George W. Bush administration to exchange them with the leadership of the MEK, a cult-like group based in Iraq that opposed the government in Tehran and until 2012 was listed by the State Department as a terrorist organization. Because of its collaboration with the Saddam Hussein regime during Iran-Iraq war, the MEK is universally despised by Iranians. In 2003 the MEK leadership was being protected by the US forces in Iraq after the Bush administration invaded and occupied Iraq in 2003.

But the Bush administration rejected the offer, because the Iran hawks wanted, and still wish, to use the MEK against the regime in Tehran. Thus, gradually, Iran either deported al-Qaeda’s members to their country of origin, or exchanged them with al-Qaeda in order to free some Iranian diplomats that had been taken hostage by the terrorist group. One such exchange occurred in September 2015. Iran released five senior members of al-Qaeda and sent them to Yemen, and in return al-Qaeda in Yemen released Iranian diplomat Nour Ahmad Nikbakht, who had been taken hostage in 2013. One of the five senior al-Qaeda members, as reported by none other than the New York Times, was Abu Mohamed al-Misri, the same”No. 2 al-Qaeda”who was supposedly assassinated by Israel’s Mossad last August in Tehran.

The fact that Al-Masri was swapped in 2015 was even reported approvingly on the website of Long War Journals, affiliated with the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), a well-funded, stridently pro-Israel lobby that opposed the nuclear agreement with Tehran known as the JCPOA, and has long promoted waging economic warfare against Iran. So, if al-Masri was returned to al-Qaeda, how did he return to Tehran, and lived there quietly and comfortably until he was killed? This defies any logic.

More importantly, why would Iran allow al-Qaeda figures to operate freely in Iran, contribute to its leadership’s decisions, and cooperate with the very same groups that Iran has been fighting against in Syria in support of the Syrian government, particularly the two main terrorist groups, the al-Nusra Front, the Syrian branch of al-Qaeda, and Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham, the groups that fought with the Syrian government for years, and are now in the Idlib province of Syria, trying to make a last stand against the Syrian army and its allies that are attempting to dislodge them?

But the strange story does not end here. On 24 October 2020 Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security announced that Abu Muhsin al-Masri,”Al-Qaeda’s No. 2 man,”who had been living in Afghanistan, had been killed by its forces. The Los Angeles Times on October 25 and Voice of America on October 26 reported the same, an event that was even celebrated in a twit by the White House National Security Council. Even Afghanistan’s President Ashraf Ghani celebrated the killing of al-Masri. Similar to the”other”al-Masri reported by the New York Times, this one is also Egyptian and was 58 when killed. Are the two the same, or they are two men using the same aliases? Afghanistan’s officials believe they are the same. In fact, after the New York Times report, Mirwais Nab, Deputy Foreign Minister of Afghanistan who was visiting Tehran, rejected the Times report and declared that”al-Qaeda No. 2 man”had been killed in Afghanistan, not Tehran.

Could it be that al-Masri had been killed in Afghanistan, but Israel’s Mossad deceived the New Times’ reporters and made them believe that he had been killed in Tehran, in order to provoke an attack by the United States on Iran?

Killing”al-Qaeda’s No. 2 man”by the US or its allies is an old story, as US officials have been claiming the same for nearly a decade. CNN reported in June 2012 that Abu Yahya al-Libi, another”al-Qaeda No. 2 man”was killed in Pakistan. Exactly three years later CNN reported that Nasser al-Wuhayshi,”al-Qaeda’s second-in-command”had been killed in Yemen. Then, it was reported that another al-Masri and, of course,”al-Qaeda’s No. 2 man,”Abu al-Khayr al-Masri, had been killed in Syria. He was one of the five operatives whom Iran had exchanged with al-Qaeda in Yemen in 2015.

But, the strangest aspect of the New York Times report is its claim that US officials have been silent about the supposed killing in Tehran. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, a Christian Zionist ideologue and an ardent supporter of Israel, has an insatiable urge to confront Iran and, if he can, start a war with that nation. As the CIA Director Pompeo released the Agency’s documents taken from Osama bin Laden’s hideout in Pakistan, but gave advanced copies to the FDD. Pompeo had presumably hoped that the FDD would uncover evidence linking Iran directly to al-Qaeda (much as the George W. Bush administration struggled to link Saddam Hussein to Al Qaeda nearly 20 years ago), so that the 2002 Authorization for use of Military Force in the so-called war on terrorism could be invoked against Iran. The FDD obliged and published a report. But the evidence for such a link that it adduced from the documents was so weak that it was almost entirely ignored by lawmakers and major media alike.

Pompeo also worked with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to organize a conference in Poland in February 2019, ostensibly about the Middle East, but clearly targeting Iran. When, in June 2019, Iran shot down a US drone that it claimed had violated its airspace in the Persian Gulf. Pompeo pushed hard for retaliatory military attacks on Iran, but Trump rejected his urgings. When precision missile and drone attacks, attributed by Washington to Iran, on Saudi Aramco’s oil facilities, heavily damaging the facilities and rendering the Saudi’s MIM-104 Patriot defense system useless. Pompeo called the attacks”an act of war”on Iran’s part.

So, one would expect Pompeo to have a field day, if”al-Qaeda’s No. 2 man”was found living quietly and comfortably in Tehran, and assassinated by Israel. This would be the”smoking gun”that he has been looking for: a definitive link between the terrorist group, whose leaders have always hated the Shiites, and the Shiite Iran, so that he can”justify”military strikes on Iran. So, why has Pompeo been silent? It simply defies logic and what is known about Pompeo and his hatred of Iran and Iranians.

The second report by the New York Times is just as alarming. It reported on Monday November 16 that President Trump met with his advisers on Thursday November 12 to discuss his options for attacking Iran. This was supposedly provoked by the latest report of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which indicated that Iran had 2442.9 kilogram of low-enriched uranium [all enriched below 5 percent], which is 12 times larger than what the 200 kilogram that the JCPOA allowed Iran to store within the country.

What is not mentioned is that, first, Iran had much larger amounts of low-enriched uranium right before the JCPOA was signed, but exported 97 percent of it to Russia after JCPOA, and, second, Iran exercised strategic patience between May 2018, when President Trump pulled the United States out of the JCPOA and imposed illegal, immoral, and sadistic economic sanctions on Iran, and June 2019 when Iran began distancing itself from the JCPOA, precisely according to the agreement that allows Iran not to deliver on its obligations, if one or all other parties to the agreement did not deliver their part of the agreement either.

Why does the President want to attack Iran, even though he is supposedly antiwar and an isolationist? The answer is clear: aside from his desire to completely destroy the JCPOA in order to make it impossible for President-Elect Joe Biden to begin negotiating with Iran again, Trump is trying to keep pleasing the Zionist billionaires who have supported him over the past four years, funding his elections. This will not only help his business ventures and those of his family members, particularly Jared Kushner, after his Presidency is over, it will also be useful to him if he or a family member decides to run in 2024. That pleasing his Israel’s supporters means more suffering for the people of Iran and the Middle East does not matter to Trump. The only thing important to Trump is Trump.

Muhammad Sahimi is a Professor at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

November 23, 2020 0 comments
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Rajavi_Giuliani
Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

Devil’s advocate literally melting down after hair dye drama

Iranian Foreign Ministry in its Twitter account used the scenes from Giuliani’s press conference to highlight his years-long abortive schemes against Iran, saying devil’s advocate literally melting down.

The Foreign Ministry added that attempts by “devil’s advocate” Rudy Giuliani to defend anti-Iran terrorism have failed and the personal attorney to US President Donald Trump “is melting down, literally,” shortly after images of the American figure showing sweat darkened by what appears to be his hair dye running down his face during a presser were widely ridiculed.

Rudy Giuliani

“Probably American public is surprised seeing Giuliani defending a lying, terrorist tyrant in exchange for big $$,”Foreign Ministry wrote in a tweet on Late Friday.

“Not news to Iranians,”it added.

Referring to members of the Mujahedin-e-Khalq Organization (MKO) terrorist group, it said,”For years he’s been a devil advocate, pocketing $$ by whitewashing despicable crimes of terrorists.”

“He’s melting down, literally!,”Foreign Ministry added.

The MKO terror group has cultivated close ties with Giuliani, among other close allies of Trump. The former New York City mayor has been among the guest speakers of the terrorist outfit’s events in Europe, where he took the podium to speak against the Islamic establishment in Iran.

Giuliani reportedly helped get the MKO off America’s terror list in exchange for a big sum of money.

Giuliani on Thursday held a chaotic press conference, during which he touted claims, as he was sweating profusely, that Trump’s votes had been “stolen” in the recent presidential election and that Democratic candidate Joe Biden’s win against Trump was fraudulent.

However, what grabbed headlines were not his election-related claims. The viewers and media were instead drawn to his agitated performance, featuring what appeared to be rivulets of hair dye flowing down his face.

The images Giuliani quickly went viral, stirring ridicule and jokes among the Democrats, social media users and media outlets worldwide.

November 23, 2020 0 comments
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MardomTV
Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

With Trump gone , is the MEK finished ?

The political: How did the MEK end up in Albania, and what difference might the change in US president make to the MEK’s future – will the MEK’s role in cyber misinformation be curtailed, will the Iranian diaspora be enabled to flourish without MEK suppression. How should Albania treat the MEK now that relations with the US will change, and what approach has the European Union taken in the past few years in dealing with the MEK’s unwanted behaviour.

The MEK’s presence in Albania: How Albanians discovered that hosting the MEK has resulted in the toxification of their country’s government, media, judiciary and security services. Panellists question the MEK’s impunity – from building an extra-territorial, extra-judicial enclave in which its enslaved members are disappeared, to how senior MEK members enjoy access to the institutes of state that Albanians are denied in their own country. At the same time, ordinary members are denied basic human rights and are effectively stateless.

With Trump gone , is the MEK finished ? - Mardomtv online debate

In conclusion: With Trump gone it may now be possible to find workable solutions to the issues raised in this debate. The horrible situation of individual MEK members can be effectively resolved by providing them real choice about their futures. A cost effective and straightforward plan would be to issue visas to their families and allow them to visit their loved ones in the camp. Once reconnected to this network of support, members can choose whether to remain with the MEK or live freely with their loving families for the remainder of their lives.

PART ONE – POLITICAL CONTEXT

In this section, experts talk about the effect of the Trump administration on the fortunes of the MEK in America, Albania and Europe.

Panellists:

To download the video file click here

Mr Massoud Khodabandeh, Middle East Strategy Consultants, former MEK member, UK

 

To download the video file click here

Mr Sina Toossi, Senior Research Analyst at the National Iranian American Council (NIAC), Washington

To download the video file click here

Dr Olsi Yazeji, Albanian-Canadian Historian, media presenter, Albania

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Mr Reza Jebelli Sadeghi, former MEK official in the USA, now working in the EU Parliament, Brussels

 

PART TWO – MEK IN ALBANIA AND HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES

This section focuses on MEK activities and behaviour since arriving in Albania and local reactions. Panellists drill down into the behaviour of the MEK in relation to Albanian civic life and the lives of the membership.

Panellists:

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Mr Gjergji Thanasi, award winning investigative journalist, Albania

To download the video file click here

Ms Migena Bala, lawyer from Tirana, Albania

To download the video file click here

Mr Hassan Heyrani, businessman in Tirana, former MEK member representing the ex-members in Albania from Tirana

 To download the video file click here

Mr Edward Termado, Armenian-Iranian former POW (Iran-Iraq war) and former MEK member, Germany

 To download the video file click here

Ms Anne Singleton, Open Minds – Cults and Deradicalization expert, UK

November 22, 2020 0 comments
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Massoud Khodabande
Former members of the MEK

Massoud Khodabande on Mardom TV online debate

An online debate on Mardom TV took place  on Friday 20th November (at 11am New York time, at 17pm Germany time, at 19:30pm Teheran time).

Parsa Sorbi moderated the debate

A panel of experts discussed the question:”With Trump gone, is the MEK finished?”

on the first part of program experts talked about the effect of the Trump administration on the fortunes of the MEK in America, Albania and Europe.

Mr. Massoud Khodabande ; Middle East Strategy Consultants and former MEK member participated the debate from UK:

To download the video file click here

November 21, 2020 0 comments
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Aziz Hedayati mother
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Who should be responsible for helping this suffering mother?

The grieving of the aged,ailed mother of an MEK member- Aziz Hedayati- or better to say hostage who is deprived of having contact with his family.

Who really is responsible for helping this elderly mother, to get in touch with her loved son in the last days of her live, or at least hear his voice after the long decades.

To download the video file click here

The MEK leaders call these aged parents as the”Iranian Regime Agents”!!

November 19, 2020 0 comments
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MardomTV
Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

ONLINE DEBATE ON MARDOMTV.COM

Mr Parsa Sorbi will moderate an online debate on Mardom TV on Friday 20th November (at 11am New York time, at 17pm Germany time, at 19:30pm Teheran time).

Parsa Sorbi - Mardom TV

Broadcast live on Facebook and YouTube, a panel of experts will discuss the question. Audience participation is welcome in a Q&A after each section.

https://www.mardomtv.com/
https://www.facebook.com/mardomtv/
https://www.youtube.com/c/ParsaSorbiMardomTV/

The program is in English.

ONLINE DEBATE ON MARDOMTV - panelists

PART ONE – POLITICAL CONTEXT
In this section, experts talk about the effect of the Trump administration on the fortunes of the MEK in America, Albania and Europe.

Panellists:
Mr Sina Toossi, Senior Research Analyst at the National Iranian American Council (NIAC), Washington
Mr Massoud Khodabandeh, Middle East Strategy Consultants, former MEK member, UK
Dr Olsi Yazeji, Albanian-Canadian Historian, media presenter, Albania
Mr Reza Jebelli Sadeghi, former MEK official in the USA, now working in the EU Parliament, Brussels

PART TWO – MEK IN ALBANIA
This section focuses on MEK activities and behaviour since arriving in Albania and local reactions.

Panellists:
Mr Gjergji Thanasi, award winning investigative journalist, Albania
Ms Migena Bala, lawyer from Tirana, Albania
Mr Hassan Heyrani, businessman in Tirana, former MEK member representing the ex-members in Albania from Tirana

PART THREE – MEK AND HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES
This section drills down into the behaviour of the MEK in relation to Albanian civic life and lives of the membership.

Panellists:
Mr Edward Termado, Armenian-Iranian former POW (Iran-Iraq war) and former MEK member, Germany
Ms Anne Singleton, Open Minds – Cults and Deradicalization expert, UK

CONCLUSION
Returning to the question – With Trump gone, is the MEK finished? – panellists will offer their analyses and answer audience questions

November 18, 2020 0 comments
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MKO hostages families in Iraq
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Denied rights of families of MEK members

The Parents, wives and children who miss their loved ones in the Mujahedin Khalq Organization (the MEK, MKO, PMOI, Cult of Rajavi) are probably the most ignored people in the mass media, although their case of human rights violation is one of the most critical ones. Their rights of contacting their loved ones in the MEK have been violated by the MEK leaders for over three decades.

On the other side, the basic rights of those who are in the MEK are violated on daily basis because they do not have access to the outside world. There is no supervision on the cult-like regulations of the group. Being deprived of contacting their loved ones, the MEK members are forced labors, kept in forced celibacy under the strict jargons of a manipulative ideological system under the leadership of Maryam and Masoud Rajavi.

Defectors of the group are living witnesses whose testimonies should be taken serious by the human rights activists.

Bagher Mohammadi

Bagher Mohammadi is the most recent defector of the MEK who, a few weeks ago, escaped the group to enjoy the rest of his life in free world. He was a soldier of the Iranian army in Iran-Iraq war when he was confined by the MEK forces in 1988. He was taken as a hostage by the group for 32 years. His family has been looking forward for his release during these years.

In the official statement that Bagher published after his defection from the MEK he announced that the group leaders had never informed him about the actions his family had taken in order to visit him.”In those days, my family had come to camp Ashraf several times,”he writes.”My mother and my brother had come but I was never told about them. When I defected the group in Albania I could manage to contact my family and then I got to know that they had tried a lot to visit me in the MEK.”

Bagher is not the first defector of the MEK with such an experience. A large number of former members of the MEK assert that once they were in the group they had no news of their family, even sometimes they were told fake news about their families.

Ghloam ali Mirzaee

GholamAli Mirzaiee is another defector living in Albania. He was recently interviewed by BBC Persian. The report about the life of Gholam Ali in the MEK prison, shows the scenes of his family in front of Camp Ashraf, Iraq, in 2010.

His wife Fereshteh Mehdian is calling on him holding a board with his name on. Another scene shows Gholam Ali on the MEK’s official TV channel claiming that those who are in front of Ashraf are not his family but the agents of the Iranian Intelligence. However, the BBC had interviewed Fereshteh at the time.”My husband was a war prisoner for ten years and then imprisoned in the MEK for 21 years,”She told reporters.

“MY son was 27 days old when his father went to war and now he is 31. He has not seen his father yet.”When ten years later, Gholam Ali was asked by the BBC reporter why he was denied to visit his wife in 2010, he said,”When I heard my name from the loud speakers in front of Ashraf, I told the authorities that I had heard my name, I thought my family was there but they told me that they were not families they were mercenaries of the Iranian intelligence ministry”.

He is now in contact with his family in Iran. The BBC report shows him video calling with his son.

Farhad Rabiei - son of Barat who is captive in the MEK camp in Albania

Farhad Rabiee is the son of Barat Rabiee. Barat is still a captive in the MEK’s camp Ashraf 3 in Manza, Albania. Farhad tried hard to visit his dad in camp Ashraf, Iraq. He was allowed to meet him only once. That only time turned out to be the worse memory of his whole life. In 2003, Farhad and his family went to Camp Ashraf, Iraq to visit his Barat. Farhad was nineteen at the time. In an interview with Mardom TV, he recounts the story of that unpleasant and unforgettable day. As soon as he saw his father, he hugged him but the authorities of the MEK got mad at Barat. He was not permitted to receive his family warmly.”Farhad is the mercenary of the Iranian regime”, the authorities argued.

Farhad recalls the bitter memories of that day. When his father wanted to hug his wife (Farhad’s mother), he was confronted by the group authorities again. Farhad witnessed her mother being physically attacked by female members of the MEK.”That day was the worst memory of my whole life… I saw with my own eyes that my mom’s heart broke, she was standing away weeping tears while MEK members were shouting at her”he says.

To download the video file click here

Kazem Shahidi is the brother of Jassem Shahidi. Jassem has been in the MEK for over 35 years. His family including his elderly mother has never seen him during these years. A few years ago, they went to Camp Ashraf, Iraq but they MEK leaders did not allow them to visit Jassem. Instead, they were attacked by stones or other things thrown from inside the camp.”My mother was harasses [in front of Ashraf] and again we could not contact my brother”, Kazem says. He has recently sent letters and messages to Albanian authorities, human rights bodies and activists asking them to pave the way for families to contact their loved ones in the MEK’s prison-like camp in Albania.

The cases of grieving families of MEK members are countless. They have been making efforts to find a way to contact their children in the MEK. Their calls must be heard. The elderly heartbroken parents should be able to see their beloved children before they die. This is a severe humanitarian issue.

Mazda Parsi

November 18, 2020 0 comments
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