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© 2003 - 2024 NEJAT Society. nejatngo.org
Mehdi Soleymani and his wife Edona Honda
The cult of Rajavi

Let’s be the voice of MEK hostages mothers

A reflection of a bitter and thought-provoking call: the narrative of a night with Mahdi, congratulating his mother because it was Mother’s Day in Iran.
Last night was a special night for us; A night called Mother’s Day in Iran. My husband, Mehdi, and I were sitting at home and getting ready to call Mehdi’s mother and congratulate her on this day. But this simple contact was not that simple for Mehdi
Mehdi, who has been deprived of visiting his mother for years, was impatient. Tears welled up in his eyes when the call was made. He looked at me and said, “Talk to my mother, so I can wipe away my tears.” He didn’t want his mother to see his tears, because he didn’t want to convey to her the pain that was imposed on him during these years.

Mehdi has spent nearly fifteen years of his life in the captivity of the People’s Mojahedin Organization (MEK); An organization that had not even allowed him to make a short phone call with his family in these years. This is completely unbelievable and digestible for me, in a world where technology and communication have reached the peak of development.

After a few moments of the call, Mehdi’s mood calmed down a bit. He said to his mother with passion: “I miss you, mother!” I wish even if I have a day left in my life, I can hold you in my arms, like the days when I was by your side and you were waiting for me to come home from work and eat lunch together.

This bittersweet call is not only a reminder of Mehdi’s personal sufferings, but also expresses the pain and suffering of thousands of families whose loved ones are trapped in this inhuman sect. A sect that not only violates humanity, but also violates people’s basic rights, such as the right to communicate with their families.
This is the first organization in the history of the world to commit such a blatant violation of human rights. But what I cannot bear is the silence of politicians and the international community, especially my country, in front of these crimes.

To all the mothers whose children, spouses or parents are caught in this cult, I say: you are not alone. Your suffering is the suffering of all of us. Let’s be the voice of those whose voices are not heard. Maybe the day will come when no mother would have to miss a child that was taken from her.

Edona Hunda, a member of Nejat Society Albania

December 30, 2024 0 comments
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Nejat Newsletter No.120
Nejat Publications

Nejat Newsletter No.120

Inside This Issue:

– Happy New Year
As we reflect on the passing year, we are filled with gratitude for your unwavering support and partnership you’ve provided us. Your kindness, generosity and dedication have helped us make a meaningful impact on the lives of the families deprived of visiting their loved ones trapped in the
‘MEK” camp in Albania.

– The hashtag “MEK terrorists” is trending again
The Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) and Maryam Rajavi were once again the subject of Iranian anger and hatred at the top of Iran-related hashtags. Iranian users used the hashtag “MEK terrorists” tens of thousands of times within a few hours.

– Raise Awareness about rights of MEK members on International Migrants’ Day
On International Migration Day, members of the MEK are deprived from their human rights as Iranian migrants in Europe. Their rights are actually violated by the group leaders rather than the host countries.

– December 10, Day of Shame for Human Rights Violators
International Human Rights Day, December 10, should be a moment of pride for human society, but for many oppressed individuals and groups, this day is just another reminder of the injustices they suffer every day. For an organization like Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), which claims to fight for freedom and justice, the irony is bitter: they themselves are the violators of the rights of their members, keeping them in solitary confinement and denying them the most basic freedoms On International Migration Day, members of the MEK are deprived from their human rights as Iranian migrants in Europe. Their rights are actually violated by the group leaders rather than the host countries.

– Thinking about mother is a crime
I wanted to write a few lines for the mothers who have children captive in the Manze camp! In our current era, which is the era of technology and information, the members of the MEK, especially in the Manze camp, are deprived of everything!

– The International Human Rights Day and MEK victims
Tomorrow is the International Human Rights Day. A day to remind the world of each and every human being’s fundamental rights. International days are occasions to educate the public on issues of concern, to mobilize political will and resources to address global problems, and to celebrate and reinforce achievements of humanity.

– About Nejat Society
Nejat Society consists of former members of the Mojahedin- e Khalq Organization (MEK, MKO, Rajavi
cult) and the families of the present members Nejat Society aims to: inform as widely as possible about the real cultic nature of the MEK, act as a pressure group to persuade the cult leaders to respect the rights of the members. reunite the people who leave the MEK with their families ..

To view the pdf file click here

December 29, 2024 0 comments
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The MEK children
The cult of Rajavi

What was the fate of us 800 MEK children?

Whenever you see someone supporting the MEK, show them this video. This is the moment when more than 800 children, including myself, were separated, in most cases forever, from their parents by the MEK cult in 1991. Prior to that, our parents were forced to divorce each other. All based on Masoud and Maryam Rajavi’s orders.

What was the fate of us 800 children? No one will fully ever know because no one kept track. But many of us were transferred to foster families and homes where in many cases we were raped and abused. Sharing our stories is not easy, but a handful of us do because we found the courage within us to do so. A few hundred of us, including myself, were eventually lured back to Iraq “to find our parents” and ended up being recruited as child soldiers by the MEK, where we spent almost two decades within their ranks. I escaped and today I share my stories.

But the MEK will argue that their goal in doing so was to “save the lives of the children” and that they took them out of a war-torn Iraq during the first Persian Gulf War. And that they were sent to safe countries.
Then you should ask them:

– Why didn’t at least one parent accompany their child?
– Why didn’t the parents join their children after the war ended?
– Why are most of these children still separated from their parents after almost 35 years?

That is when you will come to the real answer that the MEK is an Islamic cult that has stripped its members of the most basic human rights and emotions. To the point where a mother, like mine, has no love for her son anymore and chooses loyalty to the cult and leader over family.
I will not we forgive. I will not forget. And I will continue writing and sharing my stories so the world can wake up to the evil the Islamist MEK cult represents.

Ray (Mohammad Reza) Torabi

December 28, 2024 0 comments
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MEK trial
Iran

25th session of the trial court of the MEK held in Tehran

 MEK rial The 25th court session was held to hear the charges against 104 members of the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), as well as the nature of this organization as a legal entity.

The 25th court session examining the charges against 104 high-ranking members of the MEK as well as the organization’s nature as a legal entity, was held in public on Tuesday at Branch 11 of the Criminal Court of Tehran province, presided by Judge Amir Reza Dehghani.

At the beginning of the session, Judge Dehghani asked the plaintiffs’ lawyer to take the stand and make his statements.

Lawyer Kazemi said: In the last session, we talked about a topic called “engineering operations”. After the measures taken in February 1981, a large number of team houses and high-ranking individuals of the organization were identified and arrested, the organization felt danger and accordingly sought a solution to stop this process. The members of the organization executed engineering operations. Engineering operations mean carrying out intelligence work so that they can understand the reason for the leaking in the organization, so they changed their approach from assassinating individuals to collecting information.

Kazemi added: “At first, they started collecting information from the people at the community level, but they found out that they were not getting any results, so they came to the conclusion that they would kidnap people who they thought were affiliated with the Islamic Republic and obtain information from them by torturing them to find out where they were being penetrated. This was considered the engineering operation.”

Kazemi continued: “Explanations were given in the previous session regarding the execution of the engineering operation and the crimes committed against Abbas Effat-Ravesh, one of the victims of the group. In this session, we will discuss the various aspects of the MEK’s acts of kidnapping, torturing, and assassinating two members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards, Taleb Taheri and Mohsen Mirjalili, in the operation known as the Engineering Operation.”

He added: “According to the confessions of the arrested members of the NEK, the group’s central leadership, following the successive blows to the organization’s body that had led to the arrest of a large number of its members, and also in order to identify the perpetrators of the blows, took action to identify, kidnap, and torture individuals with religious appearances to gather information.”

The plaintiffs’ lawyer said: “The core members of the organization made sure that their team houses were ready for the purpose of torturing individuals, as well as providing them with the tools and equipment to torture. When they wanted to torture individuals, they would identify specific houses and equip them, for example, they would prepare a house so that no sound could escape from it.”

He quoted from an arrested member of the group, the defendant Mehran Asdaghi, one of the military commanders of the MEK at that time. In his statements justifying these actions, Asdaghi said that the regarding the announcement of the torture agenda by the group’s leaders and central cadres, the torture line was not separate from the rest of the organization’s agenda. It was a continuation of the same lines of conflicts after the 22th of July (the start of the group’s armed struggle against Islamic Republic), assassinations and burning of houses and killing of government officials, and ultimately this same process of torture.

Based on Asdaghi’s confessions, in their justifications, they said that we are torturing now, but when we come to power, we will no longer torture. In this regard, the members of the organization, taking up the torture line, attempted to kidnap Abbas Effat Ravesh, a shoemaker, Khosrow Riahi, a teacher, and three members of the Revolutionary Guards named Taleb Taheri, Mohsen Mirjalili, and Shahrokh Tahmasbi, arguing that these individuals had a religious appearance and so were probably trying to identify the organization’s team houses.

Kazemi added: On August 6, 1982, the two great martyrs Taleb Taheri and Mohsen Mirjalili, members of the Islamic Revolutionary Committee, were standing on Karun Street near a team house belonging to the group’s members. The team house security force became suspicious of them and, after coordinating with the headquarters, searched them on the street, then forced them into a car and transferred them to the team house where they were tortured.

The lawyer quoted the statements of the arrested defendants: Taleb Taheri and Mohsen Mirjalili were subjected to the most heinous tortures from the moment they arrived at this place, such as burning their bodies with an iron and boiling water, severe blows to the face and mouth, and teeth extraction by members of the organization. Then, when their torture failed, they were shot and killed by injecting cyanide into their bodies. Then, their bodies were wrapped in blankets and taken to Nizamabad and handed over to the defendant Khosrow Zandi, another member of the organization in the engineering department. They also transferred the bodies to a place in Bagh-e-Fayz that they had prepared in advance.

“The images of this incident are clear and will be made available to the court,” the lawyer said. According to these images, Taleb Taheri and Mohsen Mirjalili were two members of the Guards who were suspected by the MEK and were kidnapped, tortured and finally killed. Taleb Taheri was only 17 years old at the time.

Sedaqat, a legal expert, then took the stand and provided explanations on the subject of the engineering operation, its origins, factors, and effects. He said: “As an expert, I must have an analytical view of this incident. It must be investigated why such actions were taken and why these tortures were carried out.” According to the confessions of one of the leaders of the group and the head of their military branch in Tehran, which were read by the defense attorney, these tortures were very brutal and similar tortures cannot be found even in the Middle Ages. This amount of brutality and misconduct is unprecedented in history.

Based on the confessions of the arrested members of the MEK, Kazemi read details of the ruthless tortures MEK agents committed against the five victims of Engineering Operation to the audience.

December 25, 2024 0 comments
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Bolton and Maryam Rajavi in Albania
Mujahedin Khalq 's Terrorism

Supporting the MEK, a Strategic Mistake by US senators

The U.S. Congress must scrutinize the strategic and ethical implications of supporting the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) as an alternative to the Iranian government. Despite presenting itself as a democratic alternative, the MEK’s history of violence, ideological extremism, lack of domestic support, and cult-like behavior makes it an unviable and counterproductive choice. Aligning with this group would harm U.S. credibility.

The MEK’s Marxist-Islamist Roots and History of Violence

The MEK’s ideological foundation combines Marxism and Islamism, a mix that fundamentally conflicts with democratic principles. The group’s history is marred by acts of terrorism, including assassinations of U.S. military personnel and attacks on Iranian civilians. Although removed from the U.S. Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) list in 2012, its violent past cannot be dismissed. Supporting a group with such a record risks undermining U.S. efforts to champion democracy and human rights while tarnishing America’s image in the region.

Unpopularity Among Iranians

The MEK’s collaboration with Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq War is a source of profound resentment among Iranians, who see the group as traitorous. This association has rendered the MEK irreparably unpopular within Iran, where it has no meaningful grassroots support. Backing such a discredited group would alienate the Iranian people, strengthen anti-American narratives propagated by the regime, and delegitimize broader U.S. efforts to support the Iranian opposition.

Cult-Like, Authoritarian Structure

The MEK functions as a closed, authoritarian organization, with numerous reports of coercive practices, suppression of dissent, and psychological manipulation within its ranks. Its cult-like nature and lack of internal democracy make it incompatible with the values of freedom and pluralism that the U.S. seeks to promote. Supporting the MEK risks replacing one authoritarian regime with another, perpetuating instability rather than fostering genuine democratic reform.

Manufactured Illusion of Support

While the MEK has cultivated a public image of being a powerful and organized opposition group, much of its influence relies on financial backing and lobbying rather than genuine grassroots or domestic support. The group has poured significant resources into courting politicians and hosting high-profile events, but these efforts do not translate to actual legitimacy or broad influence among Iranians inside Iran or the diaspora.

Lack of Grassroots Base

A truly powerful and effective political organization would rely on widespread popular support and activism within the country it claims to represent. The MEK, however, has virtually no grassroots presence in Iran, where it is overwhelmingly despised for its collaboration with Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq War. Without domestic legitimacy, its perceived power as a lobby is limited to its external public relations efforts.

Dependency on Nontransparent Financial Resources

The MEK’s activities rely heavily on external funding, including contributions from wealthy donors rather than independent resources or support from Iranian communities. This lack of financial transparency undermines its claims of being a genuine, independent political movement. Instead, it portrays the MEK as a hired influence group, driven by external interests rather than representing the authentic aspirations of the Iranian people.

Shallow Political Connections

While the MEK has succeeded in securing the support of some high-profile figures, these endorsements are often the result of financial incentives, speaking fees, or a lack of understanding about the group’s true nature. Many policymakers and officials who initially supported the MEK later distance themselves after learning more about its violent past, cult-like structure, and lack of credibility.

Failing to Shift the Narrative in Iran

Despite years of lobbying and spending on international campaigns, the MEK has failed to significantly impact the narrative or political landscape inside Iran. This inability to resonate with the Iranian public, combined with its reliance on external lobbying, suggests that its perceived power is superficial and lacks real-world impact.

While the MEK may appear organized and influential on the surface due to its lobbying activities and financial resources, its lack of domestic legitimacy, grassroots support, and dependency on external sponsorship make it a weak and unsustainable political force. Its perceived power as a lobby is more an illusion created through financial investment than a reflection of genuine political strength or credibility.

December 25, 2024 0 comments
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Amir Aslan Hassanzadeh & Amir Yaghmai mothers
Human Rights Abuse in the MEK

Motherhood in the MEK vs Motherhood in free world

On the occasion of Mother’s Day in Iran, the mothers of elderly members of the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) are longing to see their loved ones in person or even make a phone call, bearing the pain of years of separation. And the middle-aged mothers of the MEK within the walls of the group’s camp are bearing the pain of denying their maternal instinct and being away from their children. The cause of these two great sufferings is the cult of personality of Massoud Rajavi.
The first group, namely mothers who have been deprived of contact with their children for an average of three decades, have been full of maternal love all these years trying to get the slightest news from their imprisoned children. They have taken their complaint to international forums and have tried to make their voices heard by justice seekers through various means.

Mothers like Soraya Abdollahi, who are symbols of maternal love and resistance to the Rajavis’ blatant oppression, stand against the various vindictive labels the MEK puts on them and insist on their fundamental right to contact their beloved children.

On the other hand, their children are under pressure from the cult-like dictatorship of the group leaders to forget their family, to consider their family as enemies, and even to consider their mothers –who cry out with tearful eyes to see them– as mercenaries. These Children were even brought in front of the group’s TV cameras to curse their mothers.
The second group are mothers who are now in the group and whose children live in different parts of the world. In this group, there are mothers whose children are also in the MEK’s headquarters but there is no mother-child relationship between them. These children were child soldiers who were smuggled from Iraq to Europe and North America, and then smuggled back to the MEK’s headquarters in Iraq as teenagers. These mothers and their MEK children have no contact with each other except for one or two official visits a year.

After forced divorces, Mujahed mothers were forced to hand over their children to the smugglers of the MEK. Many of them are unaware of the fate of their children after long years of separation. Some have also been faced with their children’s revelations about the Cult of Rajavi. On the order of the group leaders, they have denied any maternal affection for their children. Amir Yaghmai and Mohammad Reza Torabi are among the child soldiers whose mothers have denied them in the group’s media and labeled them as mercenaries of the Iranian government!

The MEK, headed by Massoud Rajavi, is the defining line between being a mother and not being a mother. Today, if any MEK member leaves Camp Ashraf 3, they are welcomed with enthusiasm by their mothers, but each of the child soldiers who have left the group and whose mothers are still trapped in it, have been so much disliked by the side of their mothers that they could accept that there is no maternal love from them.

Mazda Parsi

December 23, 2024 0 comments
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Mirlinda Zharri and women of Nejat Albania
Human Rights Abuse in the MEK

In the MEK thinking about mother is considered a crime

First of all, on the occasion of Mother’s Day, I would like to wish all the mothers of the world, especially Iranian mothers, a happy day!

I wanted to write a few lines for the future mothers who have children captive in the Manze camp! In our current era, which is the era of technology and information, the members of the Mujahedin organization, especially in the Manze camp, are deprived of everything! They cannot even contact their families, thinking about their mother is considered a crime in the Rajavi’s organization and anyone who asks members to contact their father or mother will be punished and forced to force the members! They have no feelings in their relationships with their parents and family, and if any member remembers his mother for a moment, he must be punished in the meeting and tell why he remembered his mother!

With Respect Mirlinda ZHARRI !

December 23, 2024 0 comments
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MEK members' transfer to Albania
Human Rights Abuse in the MEK

Raise Awareness about rights of MEK members on International Migrants’ Day

On International Migration Day, members of the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) are deprived from their human rights as Iranian migrants in Europe. Their rights are actually violated by the group leaders rather than the host countries.

Each year, International Migrants’ Day is observed on 18 December. Designated by the United Nations General Assembly on 4 December 2000, in response to increasing migration around the world, the day aims to draw attention to migrants’ human rights and highlight their contribution to host societies.

However, the UN and other international human rights bodies neglect the disastrous situation of over 2 thousand MEK members who are taken as hostages in the MEK headquarters in Manez, a village near Tirana, the capital of Albania. They have no legal status in Albania. They are not considered as refugees or asylum seekers or migrants. Their identity is only defined by their membership in the Cult of Massoud Rajavi (MEK).

It is important to understand that, MEK members residing under the isolating system of the Cult of Rajavi, should be entitled to have all their human rights protected and respected, regardless of the status they have in Albania. The International community as well as the Albanian government must protect all MEK members as migrants from violence, exploitation and forced labor.

According to the UN documents, On 4 December 2000, the UN General Assembly (UNGA) designated 18 December as International Migrants Day, taking into account the large and increasing number of migrants in the world. Through its resolution A/RES/55/93, the UNGA invited Member States and others to observe the Day through the dissemination of information on human rights and fundamental freedoms of migrants, the sharing of experiences, and the design of actions to ensure protection of migrants.

The UN claims that by supporting regular pathways for migration, they can enable opportunities for migrants, better protect their rights, and contribute to greater prosperity while hostages of the MEK can never think of future and prosperity. They see no regular pathway for leaving the mental and physical bars of the Cult of Rajavi. They will succeed to escape the group’s camp if they are lucky enough to accomplish their escape plan.

The rights of the MEK members are violated by the group leaders every day. They are subjected to forced celibacy, forced labor, forced clothing, forced hijab, gender segregation, mind manipulation, isolation from the outside world including their family and friends. They need urgent help from the outside world because it is quite difficult to break through all the chains that MEK leaders have tied around them.

The UN says, “Together, one step at a time, we can continue building a world where migration is safe, orderly, and beneficial – for everyone.” In order to achieve such a valuable objective, the UN officials must pay attention to the calls from the families of hostages of the MEK. They have been longing for a phone call or face to face visit with their loved ones who have been barred by the group leaders for decades.

Mazda Parsi

December 18, 2024 0 comments
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stop terrorism
Mujahedin Khalq 's Terrorism

The hashtag “MEK terrorists” is trending again

The Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) and Maryam Rajavi were once again the subject of Iranian anger and hatred at the top of Iran-related hashtags. Iranian users used the hashtag “MEK terrorists” tens of thousands of times within a few hours.
Following the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria, Massoud Rajavi, in a message of congratulating the “heroic people of Syria,” referred to the Syrian government’s opponents as “rebel vanguards” who came to power for “freedom, justice, and a democratic revolution.” The Syrian rebels, led by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) group, bear many similarities to the MEK.

Like once the MEK was, HTS is designated as a terrorist group by the United Nations Security Council and is on one of the European Union sanctions lists due to its links to Al Qaeda. The US and UK governments have also included the group on their lists of foreign terrorist organizations.

In his message of December 8, Massoud Rajavi, the leader of the MEK clearly declares that the Syrian rebels are counterparts of the MEK and their so-called resistance units in Iran, and promises the early overthrow of the Iranian government – a promise that has been repeated for nearly five decades.

These similarities have not gone unnoticed by the MEK’s warmongering American supporters in the Republican party and their media outlet Fox News. It speaks of the opportunity of the fall of Bashar al-Assad to force Iranian regime change.
The Fox News article mentions some US Republican senators who support the MEK, who we have previously seen on the list of speakers at MEK rallies. These senators consider Maryam Rajavi to be the counterpart of Mohammad al-Jolani and the National Council of Resistance of Iran to be the counterpart of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham for changing the Iranian government.

The Fox News article is the beginning of the story. A Twitter storm broke out when Fox News published the article’s title on its X social media account, along with a photo of Maryam Rajavi. The post was met with intense anger from Iranian users across the political spectrum, and eventually the hashtag #MEKTerrorists trended on X English and the hashtag “Maryam Rajavi ate shit” on X Persian. Some of the comments and replies to Fox New, on the most popular pages are noteworthy. These posts, reposts or replies are a few of the contents that contain #MEKterrorists:

Mohammad Reza Torabi, a former child soldier of the MEK:
Down with Fox News and a bunch of money-loving Republicans and anyone else who promotes the Mojahedin or Rajavi. The reality is that this old woman and her criminal husband, who occasionally issues announcements from his mouse hole and has become a homeless rooster, have long been considered dead to the Iranian people. Nothing can bring them back to life. Today is the best time to say once again #MaryamRajaviateshit.

Salome Seyednia, host of Iranian TV channel, Manoto:
Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) is a terrorist group that has no credibility or support in Iran! They are very despised and have no standing among the Iranian people! Don’t waste your time on them!

Tina Ghazimorad, editor-In-Chief at manoto TV Newsroom:
That Fox News is promoting the MEK, a terrorist sect rooted in Marxist-Islamic ideologies, is completely absurd and beyond comprehension. Not only does it discredit you, it also insults the memory of Americans who once died. Before glorifying the leader of a sect with blood on their hands, do your homework and check the historical facts. No matter how much money they spend to sell themselves as “freedom fighters,” or how skillfully they parrot what you want to hear, their history of terrorism and betrayal is undeniable.

Sarah For Trump, Iranian-American X user:
What the fuck is this shit?
The #MEKterrorists are a bunch of Islamist-Marxist, undemocratic as*holes who force women to wear hijabs in their fucking cult. Their crap ideology screws over the U.S, Israel, and the Iranian people hate their guts.

Sarah Raviani, Iranian American X user:
The MEK is a terrorist organization that chanted “Death to America” and celebrated the 1979 U.S. Embassy seizure in Tehran after Iran fell to Khomeini.

Ali Hamid, Iranian documentary filmmaker:
To clueless U.S. politicians:
The MEK, which you support and normalize, killed dozens of Americans, including these servicemen. If Iranian lives don’t matter to you, respect your own victims’ families. Shame.

MEK killed US personel newspaper

MEK killed US personel newspaper

Niyak Ghorbani, UK-based Iranian user:
Supporting the Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK), (OIAC Iran) is akin to supporting the terrorist organisation Hamas 30 years from now—a group that has always been an enemy of Israel and the Jewish people. The MEK, allies of Saddam Hussein and Yasser Arafat, and responsible for the killing of thousands of Iranian soldiers and civilians, will have no place in a free Iran of the future. Instead, they will be brought to justice for their crimes against the Iranian people.

Saeed Ghasseminejad, Iranian economist:
MEK is a Marxist-Islamist cult with American blood on its hand.

Hillel Neuer International human rights lawyer, writer, Executive Director of United Nations Watch:
Because I occasionally appear on FoxNews, I need to inform them: this woman Maryam Rajavi and her Mojahedin-e-Khalq (MEK) are a cult. Not a credible voice at all.
Mazda Parsi

December 16, 2024 0 comments
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Aldo Solulari, media media manager
The cult of Rajavi

December 10, Day of Shame for Human Rights Violators

International Human Rights Day, December 10, should be a moment of pride for human society, but for many oppressed individuals and groups, this day is just another reminder of the injustices they suffer every day. For an organization like Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), which claims to fight for freedom and justice, the irony is bitter: they themselves are the violators of the rights of their members, keeping them in solitary confinement and denying them the most basic freedoms.

The True Face of Oppression

Inside the MEK camps, beyond the facade of the rhetoric of fighting tyranny, there is a dark reality. The organization’s members face an internal regime that violates every principle of human rights. They are kept in total isolation, deprived of contact with the outside world and, most importantly, with their families. In the name of discipline and dedication to the cause, these people are treated as property of the organization, not as human beings.
What is the difference between an authoritarian regime and an organization that imprisons the minds and bodies of its members? The answer is simple: none. The MEK, which claims to fight oppression, is itself a tool of oppression for those who constitute the flesh and blood of its organization.

Blatant Rights Violations

1. Total Isolation:
The MEK camps operate as open prisons. No member is allowed to leave without the approval of the leaders. This is a flagrant violation of the right to movement and self-determination, a right guaranteed by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
2. Indoctrination and Mind Control:
Members are subjected to a continuous process of indoctrination, where any critical thought is suppressed and replaced with blind obedience to the organization’s leaders. This is a form of mind control that violates the right to free thought.
3. Denial of Family Life:
One of the cruelest violent tactics of the MEK is the separation of members from their families. Numerous reports testify to parents not seeing their children for years and people being forced to deny family ties for the sake of the organization. This is a blatant violation of the right to family and human relations.
4. Inhuman Treatment and Fear:
Those who dare to criticize or demand their removal face threats, psychological pressure and, in some cases, physical violence. This is the height of hypocrisy for an organization that claims to fight for rights and freedoms.

A Call for Intervention

Organizations like the MEK should have no place in a world that claims to support human rights. Beyond their political rhetoric, they are systems that foster isolation and violence against their own members. The international community must stop turning a blind eye to these violations. If the world truly stands for human rights, it must intervene and help those who are held hostage by these organizations.
December 10 cannot be an international day unless every individual is free and their rights are guaranteed. The MEK are living proof of hypocrisy and rights violations, condemning hundreds of people to isolation and loss of their identity. This day should be a call for justice and an end to violations, wherever they occur. Silence in the face of these injustices is complicity with oppression.

Violence in the MEK Camps

These acts of violence are not random; they are structured and orchestrated to maintain control over members.
1. Physical Violence as a Means of Intimidation
Reports from former members point to numerous cases where individuals have been brutally beaten by camp guards or other members on the orders of the leaders. This violence is used as punishment for those who try to leave the organization, criticize the leaders, or do not blindly follow orders. Cases include beatings to the point of severe injuries and prolonged isolation in inhumane conditions.

2. Psychological Violence and Emotional Torture
In addition to physical violence, members are subjected to ongoing psychological violence. They are forced to participate in “self-criticism sessions,” where they are forced to admit fabricated guilt and face public humiliation. This is a form of torture that aims to break them spiritually and make them obedient to the leaders. Feelings of guilt and fear permeate the daily lives of these people, leaving them without hope for the future.

3. Denial of Medical Treatment
Physical and psychological violence is often accompanied by the denial of medical treatment for the injured. Members who face health problems as a result of the violence are left without medical assistance or treated minimally, as an additional form of punishment.

Aldo Sulollari, Media manager of Nejat Society Albania

December 11, 2024 0 comments
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