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    • عربي
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© 2003 - 2024 NEJAT Society. nejatngo.org
the Nejat Society conference in Tirana
Former members of the MEK

Nejat Society Albania’s Conference in Tirana, We are equal

On Sunday, November 26, 2023, a gathering was held by Nejat Society Albania following a public call, at the futsal park in the crowded area known as “Rruga Ura” in downtown Tirana. The event was titled: “We are all equal and we support the basic human rights of all different communities in Albania”.

The event was supposed to begin at 11 am. Over 300 citizens of Tirana gathered in the below freezing temperature at the end of the autumn, and many more people watched the program while passing through the park. The audience wanted to know the Iranian community living in Albania who include some defectors of the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK).

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

The gathering started by Erisa Rahimi (Idrisi) who announced the program with explanations about Nejat Society Albania and its Iranian members. Then, a new documentary entitled “Biography” produced by Nejat Society in Albanian language was played. The video which displayed the pain and sufferings of waiting families was well received by the audience. Ms. Rahimi introduced Ebrahim Khodabandeh, CEO of Nejat Society.

Khodabandeh delivered his speech online. He first thanked the participants for their presence, as well as the authorities in the Albanian government, who have given members of Nejat Society a sense of security in Tirana.

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

He stated, he stated that apart from any political issue, this is an issue of human rights for the families who want to have contact with their loved ones taken as hostages in the MEK’s camp. and requested the authorities of the Albanian government to provide the means to fulfill this request as soon as possible. He drew the attention of the Albanian statesmen to the gross violation of human rights inside the MEK camp in Albania.

Then, the documentary of the gathering of families in front of the Turkish Embassy which represents interest section of Albania, in Tehran was shown along with its final statement in Albanian language, which had an immense impact on the participants and even the television network staff who were present on the scene. The film made them upset.
Erisa Rahimi continued the program introducing Soraya Abdallahi, the head of the Mothers’ Organization of Nejat Society, and pointed out that she had been deprived of contact with her only son for 22 years.

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

Abdullahi, the mother of Amir Aslan Hassanzadeh, who is trapped in the MEK’s camp in Albania, started speaking online. On behalf of all the families, and especially on behalf of all the mothers, he requested the people and the media of Albania to convey the rightful request to communicate with their loved ones to the ears of the Albanian statesmen, so that maybe after decades this right and this request will be fulfilled. During Abdullahi’s speech, a number of Albanian mothers who participated in the scene were crying and those present were deeply impressed.

Hamid Agh Atabai, one of the defectors from the Cult of Rajavi and a member of Nejat Society Albania, gave a speech. He first spoke about his experiences inside the MEK, which was new to the attendees. He also spoke of the so-called resistance units of the MEK and the threat this organization poses to the security of the people of Iran and to the security of the Albanian people. He expressed his personal dark experiences during his years of stay in the MEK camp in Albania and how his life changed after being rescued from this destructive cult.
The speeches of Khodabandeh, Abdullahi and Atabai were interpreted live for the audience, by the host of the event, Erisa Rahimi.

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

Then the messages of support from the friends of Nejat Society, including the human rights activist Naimeh Jongtsai, the famous writer Mr. Leonard Nika, and pastor Christian Kotori, who were supposed to give a speech but could not be physically present due to holidays and vacation, were read.

The final statement of the meeting, signed by the participants, was read aloud.

November 29, 2023 0 comments
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the Nejat Society conference in Tirana
Former members of the MEK

The Albanian Kristal TV report on the Nejat Society Albania conference in Tirana

The Albanian website Kristal TV published a report on the big gathering of the Nejat Society Albania in Tirana.

The report reads:

The great conference of Nejat Albania – Confessions and human calls
A conference on human rights was held last Sunday morning. The event took place in Tirana with many participants where they were present and closely followed the entire event.

The association Nejat Albania, under the slogan “We are all equals” gave strong sensitizing messages giving a special importance to the Iranian community in Albania who have chosen to live freely in Albania and forming their families here and a life from the beginning.

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

Ebrahim khodabandeh, as a supporter of the Nejat Society in Iran, gave a big thank to the Albanian institutions that have supported the Iranain community in Albania not only by integrating them as best as possible in various professional fields, but also by giving them an opportunity to create a life they had missed inside the MEK camp.

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

Ebrahim Khodabandeh, the head of the Nejat Society, said that the MEK organization keep its members locked up and deprive them of basic human rights. The MEK claimed that it would form an opposition that promises democracy and freedom, but they took away from the members the right to communicate with their families, and they took away the right to live freely.

The association Nejat Albania operates in the framework of the integration of this foreign community in Albania and has made it possible for them to protect the status of human rights by enabling re-contact with their families in Iran and creating a stabilized life in Albania.

Hamid Atabay

Hamid Atabay

Hamid Atabay former member of the MEK and now a member of Nejat testified his own dark personal experiences that accompanied him in his years of staying within the MEK camps. He described how his life has changed since the establishment of Nejat. He further shows that staying in the MEK means being a person without rights.

Part of this conference was also a mother who still has her son in the MEK camp who said that she has had no contact with her son for many years.

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

the Nejat Society conference in Tirana

Soraya Abdollahi said: the MEK took away our right to feel the love of our children, our children have fallen prey to a huge fraud. I am very excited when I see the support of Albanian citizens through this conference because it gives me hope to meet my son, Amir Aslan.

I also appeal to the Albanian institutions and the Prime Minister himself to make it possible for the mothers to meet their children, but also to tell them the bitter truth that camp leaders destroyed those people lives only for their own interests.

November 28, 2023 0 comments
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Masoomeh Rezaei has been deprived of seeing her son for many years.
Missions of Nejat Society

The Albanian public opinion should be informed about Rajavi’s modern slavery

Masoomeh Rezaei has been deprived of seeing her son for many years. His son, Saeed Farajullah Hosseini, was captured by Iraqi forces during the Iran-Iraq war and was transferred from the camp of Iranian prisoners of war in Iraq to the headquarters of Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), under a collusion between Massoud Rajavi and Saddam Hussein.

Saeed Hosseini’s family was unaware of his condition for two years until they were informed that Saeed was in the MEK camp. Since then, the Hosseini family has not been allowed to meet their child.

However, Masoomeh did not stop her efforts to find a way to meet her son. She is a member of Nejat Society and she has taken many actions to achieve her goal. She regularly publishes text and video messages on the Internet in the hope that Saeed will see her by chance. But, members of the MEK have no free access to the internet and other media. They are isolated from the outside world, Saeed togetherwith about two thousand people!

“I miss you,” Masoomeh Rezaei addresses Saeed in a video message, “I wish I could see you soon before I die like your father who died with out being able to see you.”

Families at Liberty camp Gate - Iraq

Families at Liberty camp Gate – Iraq

Masoomeh is only one of hundreds of mothers who have been languishing for a free visit with their beloved children taken as hostages by the Rajavis.

No one saw their some 40-year-old sufferings. No one heard their cries. In solitude, they knocked closed doors and suffered slander and unkindness, but they did not get discouraged. They sat waiting for their loved ones and made a promise to each other to work hard to expose the hypocrisy of the Cult of Rajavi.

Families whose loved ones have been imprisoned in the camps of the MEK, have been unknown and forgotten victims of the MEK in Iran, Iraq and now Albania. But they have come out to make the crimes and inhuman nature of the MEK known to the world. Nejat Society Albania’s main mission is to aid these families be recognized by the Albanian community, human rights activists and government authorities.

Today, the Conference which is held by Nejat Society in Tirana is a step forward to enlighten the Albanian community about the human rights violations that are taking place inside the MEK day and night. The Albanian public opinion should be informed that behind the walls of Ashraf 3, a few kilometers away from Tirana, Maryam Rajavi rules a modern slavery.

November 26, 2023 0 comments
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Nejat Society
Missions of Nejat Society

Nejat Society heading for an event in Albania

Nejat Society Albania has another activity ahead. In the next event in Tirana, an unforgettable program is promised to people.
Nejat Society Albani is going to hold a conference tomorrow, Sunday, November 26th, at 11:00 AM, in Tirana. Nejat members, Albanian human rights activists and other interested people from the Albanian public will attend the event.

Nejat Society states that the purpose of holding this public conference is to draw the attention of the Albanian authorities to the issue of violation of the rights of the families of members of the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) who live at Ashraf 3.

Nejat Society is supposed to introduce its missions in the framework of the convergence of Iranian community in Albania. The Society brings an action to the Albanian public and audience, an action that is expected to lead to a large-scale conference, welcoming the Albanian public with an open invitation to those who like to know more about the Iranian community in Albania.

It has been announced that the event will be held in the capital in a busy area, near the area known as “Rruga Ura” near the club of athletes of amateur football teams.
It is expected that more than 60 people who have accepted the invitation of the association will participate to follow the whole activity closely, but in the meantime, the Nejat Society and its public relations cannot count the number of participants who want to be there.

It is worth to mention that the activities of Nejat Society Albania are carried out one after the other and it is supposed to create an interesting cultural program for the people of Albania by the Iranian community. There will be incredible moments when members of the Nejat society and former members of the Mujahedin-e Khalq share their painful experiences under the organization with the audience and make their past –when they were imprisoned in the organization’s camp– known to the public.
The event will be welcome by participants from different communities with different positions. “We are all equal” is the title of the program, which shows that the only thing that matters is humanity, being human and having feelings.

Fortunately, the former MEK members have regained their feelings since they escaped from in the group’s camp, according to their statements in various interviews for the media. They were treated like “robots” without feelings, without family and without human rights.

From 11:00 a.m., Nejat Society Albania welcomes you at the above-mentioned place.

Contact Nejat Society Albania on Instagram and Facebook.

November 25, 2023 0 comments
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Meeting with Leonard Nika
Missions of Nejat Society

Famous Albanian author visited Nejat Society

Members of Nejat Society Albania received the Albanian author Leonard Nika at their office in Tirana.

Leonard Nika, the famous Albanian author has recently published a new book. Three days ago, a book fair was held in Tirana, during which the new book of him was unveiled. During the ceremony, Leonard Nika met the members of Nejat Society Albania and accepted their invitation to attend the office of the association in order to discuss issues of interest of both sides.

Meeting with Leonard Nika

Members of Nejat Society Albania received the Albanian author Leonard Nika at their office in Tirana

Nika appreciated Nejat activists for their participation in the opening ceremony of his book. Members of Nejat Society Albania described their lived experiences under the ruling of Maryam Rajavi where the cult-like hierarchy of the group violates the most basic human rights of members who are isolated in Ashraf 3, near Tirana.

Members of Nejat Society explained about the sufferings of families whose loved ones are kept in the MEK’s camp and are not allowed to contact or visit them. Leonard Nika was moved by the stories of families of MEK hostages.

Leonard Nika at a book fair to introduce his newly published book

Leonard Nika at a book fair to introduce his newly published book

“I was very impressed,” he said. “You spent the same period in the MEK as what we spent in Albania under the communist dictatorship.”
At the end of this meeting, the cultural productions of Nejat Society were presented to Nika. He expressed his satisfaction with his presence in the office of Nejat Society and his discussion with the members. He thanked them for the enlightening explanations given by them.

November 25, 2023 0 comments
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MEK children
The cult of Rajavi

Why the MEK separated children from their families

After the defeat of Operation Forough Javidan (aka the Eternal Light and/or Mersad) (August 3-7, 1988), Massoud Rajavi, who was in charge of the operation, instead of accepting responsibility and responding to his erroneous analyses, held a series of meetings for the failure of the operation in the spring and summer of 1989, in which he laid the blame on the warriors of the so called “National Liberation Army” and members of the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK/MKO). His point was that “you”, the warriors, thought of your spouses, instead of fighting the enemy with all “your” might. Even if you did not have a spouse, you were thinking of your imaginary spouse. Therefore, you did not give your whole existence to me. The cause of that failure is you! And solution?! “Eternal divorce of men and women”; both in practice and in mind”! Without making the issue of ideological divorces public, with the announcement of Maryam Rajavi becoming the first person in charge on October 17, 1989, the ideological revolution (second stage) was officially announced.

The inner world of the Mujahedin, if examined at all, is still a mystery to Western observers, and it is the Mujahedin’s deliberate policy that sustains it. For this reason, little importance has been given to this aspect of their organization. However, cult culture is one of the most dangerous forms of society. Firstly, because the most basic human rights deprive members of even the right to think. The Mujahedin have carried out forced marriages and later forced divorces, separated children from their parents, and placed them under the care of their supporters in various countries.

The MEK children

The MEK children

The sacrifices that each member of the group had to make were expressed in a series of “ideological revolutions” led by the group’s leader (Massoud Rajavi). The leadership called on members to disassociate themselves from any physical or emotional attachment in order to increase their “fighting capacity.” In the case of married couples, this stage of the “ideological revolution” required them to divorce their emotional ties with their spouses. Massoud Bani-Sadr reports on how this process took place .

during the “ideological meeting of” high-ranking and executive members “after the defeat of the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization in Iran:

The first thing I had to do in Baghdad was watching the videotape of an ideological meeting for “executive and high-ranking members.” The meeting, called “Imam Zaman”, began with a simple question: “To whom do we owe all our achievements and everything we have?”. Rajavi did not claim to be the Imam of our time as I thought, but only said that we owe everything to the Imam of our time… The aim was to show that if there is more unity, we can reach Tehran. Our leader, as he was with the Imam of Time and God; He was willing to sacrifice everything he had (which was all of us!) To God, claiming that all he had in mind was to do what God wanted him to do. We were expected to conclude that there was no barrier between Rajavi and Imam Zaman. However, there was a barrier between us and him [Rajavi]… Which prevented us from seeing him clearly. This “barrier” was our weakness. If we recognized our weakness, we would see why and how we failed in Operation Forough Javidan (Mersad) and elsewhere.

Massoud and Maryam [Rajavi] had no doubt that the guardian in all our cases is our current wife.
The organization’s order for “mass divorce” caused a great deal of psychological distress and confusion. Massoud Bani-Sadr describes the atmosphere inside Camp Ashraf during this period:

The atmosphere of the camp was completely different… The misery was unceasing… Everyone seemed to be in the new phase of the “ideological revolution.” The only legitimate discussion was about the revolution and the exchange of relevant experiences.

Nothing else mattered. There was no outside world. . . Even poor single people had to divorce their weaknesses, without knowing what those weaknesses meant. Apparently, the answer was to divorce all the women or men they loved. Only later did I realize that the MEK was seeking not only a legal divorce but also an emotional or “ideological” divorce. In my heart, I had to divorce Anna [his wife], and in fact, I had to learn to hate her as a barrier between our leader and myself.
Rajavi announced at that meeting that as our “ideological leader” he had ordered the mass divorce of our spouses. He asked everyone to hand over their rings. It was the strangest and most disgusting meeting I had ever attended. It lasted almost a week.

Rajavi told his followers that the defeat of the Forough Javidan (Mersad Operation) was not a military mistake, but was rooted in the members’ thoughts about their spouses. Their love had weakened their will to fight. In 1990, all the women in the camp were ordered to get a divorce – and the women replaced their wedding rings with pendants on which Massoud’s face was engraved. The couples separated and their children were sent to “to be adopted” by MEK supporters in Europe.
In essence, the next phase of the MEK’s ideological revolution was one year after the divorce of the families to destroy family bonds completely. Under the pretext of the war in Iraq, Massoud Rajavi ordered that all children be sent from Iraq to Europe, the United States, and other countries. About 800 children were sent from Iraq to other countries and handed over to Mujahedin supporters in those countries.

Manuchehr Abdi

Manuchehr Abdi

MEK commanders called on all members to expose sexual misconduct publicly. Manouchehr Abdi, 55, who also left the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK/MKO) in Albania, said, confessionals were held every morning. He says that even the feelings of love and friendship were illegal. “I have to admit that I missed my daughter,” she says. They would shout at me, they humiliated me, they said that my family was the enemy and that nostalgia for them was to strengthen the hands of the mullahs in Tehran.

Batool Soltani joined the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization in 1986 with her husband and infant daughter. At first, her family was able to live together, but in 1990, she says, she was forced to divorce and she abandoned her five-year-old daughter and new-born son, who had been sent abroad to be brought up by MEK supporters. Soltani claims that she has been forced to have sex with Massoud Rajavi several times since 1999.

In fact, the Ideological Revolution turned the Mujahedin into unusual and confusing creatures. The idea that made the MEK a cult stems from internal developments in 1985. Whatever the outcome of these issues, it is clear that the Mujahedin is not a normal organization.

Elizabeth Rubin, an American journalist, gave mysterious reports during her visit to the Mujahedin camp. She describes entering the camp, which was mostly made up of women:
You feel like you have entered the imaginary world of female worker bees. Of course, there are men around. About 50% of the soldiers are men. But as I turned around, I saw women dressed in khaki clothes and flowery scarves walking back and forth along the streets in white vans or army green trucks, staring forward, a little dazed or sometimes purposeful.
“The MEK is the only army in the world whose command corps is made up mainly of women,” said Elizabeth Rubin.
Many analysts, including Rubin, describe the MEK as a cult and point to the group’s loyalty to the Rajavis. Older women were reportedly forced to divorce their husbands in the late 1980s, and younger girls could not marry or have children.
“Rajavi liked to have women around him and reformed the command structure to replace men with women, this time calling it the ‘Constitutional Revolution,’” she said. He [Massoud Rajavi] was also politically savvy, adding a fascinating flavor to their public relations in the West.

In an interview with Elizabeth Rubin, 19-year-old Sahar says: “My mother was pregnant at the time of her arrest, and I was born in 1983 in Evin Prison. When I was one year old, my father was executed for supporting the Mujahedin. Now I drive a Cascavel (a Brazilian armored car). My mother is at another camp. This was one of the reasons I decided to join the army.
“Most of the girls I met grew up in Mujahedin Ashraf schools, where they lived apart from their parents,” Rubin said. Family visits were allowed on Thursday and Friday nights. When Iraq invaded Kuwait, many of these girls were deported to Jordan and then smuggled to various countries – Germany, France, Canada, Denmark, the United Kingdom, and the United States, where they were taken care of by Mujahedin supporters. When they were 18 or 19 years old, many of them decided to return to Iraq and fill the ranks of the youngest generation of Mujahedin. “Decided” is probably not the right word, though, because from the day they were born, these girls and boys were not taught to think for themselves, but to blindly follow their leaders. Nadereh Afshari, a former MEK member, told me, “every morning and night, children between the ages of 1 and 2 had to stand in front of a poster of Massoud and Maryam, greeting them and praising them.” Afshari, who was based in Germany and was responsible for receiving MEK members’ children during the Persian Gulf War, said that the MEK members did not accept her when the German government tried to attract MEK’s children to its education system. Many children were sent to Mujahedin schools, especially in France. Afshari continued: The Rajavis saw these children as soldiers of the next generation. They wanted to brainwash them and control them. This may explain the pattern of their story and life: a journey to power and enlightenment in the way of self-sacrifice inspired by the light and wisdom of Maryam and Massoud.

Amin Golmaryami ; The MEK former member

Amin Golmaryami

Amin Golmaryami is one of the children who was a victim of the ideological revolution in the Mujahedin and one of those who was separated from his family and sent to Europe.
In an interview with Amin Golmaryami, the German magazine “Dit” acknowledged that five pieces of evidence against the MEK had been upheld in a German court.

The court confirmed that what the MEK claimed to justify the smuggling of MEK children from Iraq to Europe in 1991 was not true. In fact, the group leaders did not want to save the children’s lives, but their goal was to destroy the family structure. The court found this to be perfectly acceptable, based on investigations and analyses by the journalist.
The court confirmed that Amin Golmaryami was a child soldier who was taken to Iraq by MEK agents, where he received military training based on available documents and the testimony of other former child soldiers.

The court confirmed that Amin Golmaryami did not visit his mother immediately after entering the Iraqi MEK camp (Camp Ashraf). It took him two weeks to meet with his mother in the presence of other female members who were watching them.
In fact, MEK agents promised Amin that they would take him to Iraq to stay with his mother for a short time and then they would return to Europe, but according to Amin and other child soldiers, they were not allowed to visit their parents for more than once a year in Camp Ashraf.

Amin Golmaryami came to Germany as a child. He says that when he was 15, he was taken from Cologne to Iraq with many other young people _ to a military camp run by an Iranian group called the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK/MKO). He is the first victim of this political cult to make his story public in his own name.

He rarely speaks German with an accent, yet occasionally uses words in his native language, Persian. They are not difficult to translate, they are more difficult to explain: Almaas-e Ensaani, for example, means “human diamond”. This is one of the main ideological concepts of the MEK that he fell into as a child, says Golmaryami: “The idea behind this is that everyone has a diamond inside them that has been damaged.” It is the person himself who is to blame for his desires – like the love for the family.

All this must be ignored. Only through loyalty to a leader can one be “cleansed.” This explanation is also recounted by other witnesses.

Amin Golmaryami was born in 1985 in the city of Abadan in southwestern Iran. His parents were former MEK members. In 1979, they and other opposition groups overthrew the Shah of Iran. However, the subsequent Islamic government did not allow the Mujahedin-e Khalq to have a share in the government and persecuted them. The MEK then carried out attacks on government employees and eventually fled into exile, most of whom fled to Iraq.

When a US-led alliance invaded Iraq in 1991 during the Second Gulf War, the MEK used the flow of refugees to send hundreds of children abroad. Today, the MEK says they did it to save them from bombs and war, but it was also to break the family structure and strengthen the fighting spirit. Amin Golmaryami and his two brothers Alireza and Hanif were there.
Amin Golmaryami remembers the journey in pieces. “My mother stood in front of the bus for a long time, crying and waving,” he said. They were taken to Germany. He and about 150 other children came to Cologne. Golmaryami was housed in a place in the Meschenich region, he recalls it as a dilapidated half-finished house. The children were there as young asylum seekers unaccompanied and under the care of Mujahedin-e Khalq staff and trustees. Ten of them slept in one room. Golmaryami says: I missed my mother very much. Some were beaten, and many had nothing to eat. Amin went to school and quickly learned German.

Most of the Iranian children were older than him and attended Martin Luther King Jr. High School in Cologne-Wieden. One of the teachers at the time recalled: The children were “happy and hardworking”. But there was also something fanatical about them. Some worshiped the leader Massoud Rajavi and his wife Maryam “like gods.”
He once stayed with a German school friend and was surprised that his parents both kissed him goodnight. “It was then that I realized my life was very different”, he says.

From the mid-1990s, some teachers noticed that the MEK children had suddenly disappeared from Cologne. 14-, 15-, and 16-year-olds suddenly did not show up for classes.

Amin Golmaryami says that in 1999, his 18-year-old brother Hanif also disappeared. Hanif ordered Amin and their third brother Alireza to go to a secret meeting point in Westfriedhof, Cologne, to say goodbye to each other. Hanif said: I am going to Iraq. His destination was the headquarters of the Mujahedin-e Khalq, a military camp called Ashraf. The cadres had promised him that he would meet with his mother there. Amin Golmaryami says that he was shocked and shed tears when he heard these words.

Hanif Golmaryami, who now lives in Canada, says he missed her mother badly at the time and longed for motherly advice and hugs. The MEK cadres had assured him that if he did not like Iraq, he could return in a few weeks, and he believed them.
Amin once again saw his brother Hanif in a propaganda video shown to him and other children by the cadres: Hanif was marching in a parade Iraq. Eventually, he was convinced that he should follow the same path as his brother Hanif, and eventually he and his older brother, Alireza, went to Iraq.

Amin was afraid that his whole family and all his friends would gradually leave him. To be forced to stay alone in Germany. He envisioned Iraq as a large holiday camp. He was originally a minor, and he says, “they manipulated me.”
Upon entering the camp, he decided to leave, but his brother stopped him. Little by little he adapted to the situation, woke up at 4 in the morning, marched, and learned to shoot and drive a tank. And two weeks later he met his mother while the women accompanying him were spying on him.

After that, he only had the opportunity to meet his mother once a year, and he gradually hated his mother. He says he still feels the consequences of not having a normal family.

Other children who were separated from their families in the MEK’s camp include Hanif Azizi. He grew up in a military camp in the Iraqi desert. His parents were soldiers of the Mujahedin-e Khalq Revolutionary Movement in Iran. After his father was killed in the war, Hanif, who was nine years old, was sent to Sweden with his brother. He is having a hard time adapting to the new country. For the first two years, they were with a family of Mujahedin supporters, but due to domestic violence and lack of love, the Department of Children and Adolescents removed them from the family and gave them custody to a Swedish family. As a teenager, he was in contact with the Mujahedin insurgent movement again. Eager to socialize and meet his mother, he went to Iraq to join the MEK. There he was brainwashed and decided to join the Mujahedin. But he was allowed to return to Sweden to settle some issues and to bring his younger brother back to the Mujahedin. As he waited to return to Iraq with the Mujahedin, talking to different people and thinking about what had happened to him, he realized that his decision to return to the Mujahedin in Iraq was not his own, but influenced by them. This is how he changed his mind and decided to stay in Sweden. He is now a police officer in Sweden.

The Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK/MKO) is accused of separating hundreds of children living in the MEK’s camps in Iraq from their parents and sending them from Iraq to various countries between 1990 and the beginning of the 1970s. The number of these children is estimated between 700 and 900 people. By doing so, the Mujahedin deprived the children of their parents and destroyed the family structure. The Mujahedin Organization has never published any report on the fate of these children and the situation of many of them is unknown.

The Mujahedin is also accused of illegally returning dozens of the same children from various European countries to Iraq for several years by deceiving them and promising that these children could go to Iraq to see their parents. Their departure from Iraq has forced them into the army. Some of those children in the military now talk about what happened to them through interviews or memoirs.

Conclusion: About 700 to 900 children under the age of 1 to 17 were separated from their families under the pretext of the war in Iraq and the protection of children in the Mujahedin Organization and were sent to European countries and other countries.

During the distant years, many of the parents of these children lost their lives and were never able to see their children again.

Some of these children, wishing to see their parents again and being deceived by Mujahedin supporters, returned to the Mujahedin camp after many years and underwent special care and brainwashing. Some of them also saved themselves and turned their backs on this dreadful organization forever. The fate of some of these children is unknown. Although “liberation and equality of women’s rights” was both a political goal and a strategy in the MEK, it forbade women and mothers from their most natural right, namely motherhood and love, and for many years forbade women, children, and, of course, fathers. He tortured them with brainwashing and sheer obedience and gained the will and decision-making power.

To view the PDF file click here

November 22, 2023 0 comments
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drug trafficking mafia of the MEK in the Kingdom of Sweden
Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

Drug trafficking mafia of the MEK in the Kingdom of Sweden

According to Tasnim News Agency, an important part of the drug mafia network is active in the Kingdom of Sweden, and its members are formed by doctors who have a history of being a member of the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) and have participated in the terrorist operation known as “Forough Javidan”.

The task of this network is mostly in the field of finance and support of the MEK, and they are specialized in providing their items and necessities, especially the medical items. Such as ethanol, Gelofen tablets, a number of oximeter devices, ventilators, gowns and sheets for infectious diseases, etc., as well as health items related to Corona, such as masks and specialized medicines, which were rare in Albania, were smuggled into this country and transferred to Ashraf 3 headquarters.

One of the methods of providing these drugs has been that the mentioned doctors work in different branches of medicine such as psychiatry, dentistry, pharmacy, and surgery, etc., and in the meantime, by writing fake prescriptions for the group members, they provide part of these drug needs.

The identity of some elements of this drug mafia network belonging to the MEK sympathizers residing in Sweden, who are also connected with the Swedish security service, has been obtained, which is as follows:
1.Hanifeh Kheiri: Resident of Malmö, Sweden
2.Amrneh Moaveni, the child of Mohsen and Fatemeh, born 1959 in Tehran, with the pseudonym: Azam Memari, resident of Stockholm, Sweden, head of the Iranian Women’s Society – Stockholm
3.Sina Dashti, son of Mohammad Mahdi – birth certificate number 982 – born in 1963 in Shiraz. Sina Dashti is a specialist in infectious diseases and a resident of Utoyori, Sweden, who was responsible for an important part of drug smuggling to Albania during the Corona era.
4.Farzaneh Dashti is a dentist living in Sweden who works with her husband Siamak Safari as part of the MEK’s mafia network in Sweden (Dashti Group).
5.Firouze Dashti, a member of Iranian specialist associations in Norway and her husband Behrouz Omid (dentist)
6– Seyed Ali Hashemi, the son of Seyed Mohammad, born in 1953 in Damghan, with the nickname of Dr. Ali or Ali Damghani, who is also in contact with his family by phone. He has two daughters who are active as a sub-group. Ali Damghani is one of the trusted doctors of the MEK, and he follows up the medical and treatment affairs of the cult in Sweden and other European countries, and he visits the MEK’s headquarters in Europe.

Another point about Hashemi is that he, along with his wife Razieh Tolo Sharifi (a doctor with the nickname Mahboobeh), one of his sisters named Fatemeh Hashemi and her sister’s husband, participated in the operation known as “Forough Javidan”, all of whom died except for Ali Damghani, and then, he married his sister-in-law named Mehri Tolo Sharifi. He has a son named Mohammad Reza from his first wife.

Based on this information, Ali Damghani also has a sister named Zahra, who travels to Sweden, and his other sister, named Razia, has a history of supporting Mujahideen and being arrested in her case at the beginning of the revolution. After marriage, Razia legally left the country and settled in Sweden, and in recent years, she has traveled inside the country.

Translated by Nejat Society

November 20, 2023 0 comments
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Maryam Rajavi
Maryam Rajavi

Maryam Rajavi on the graves of mothers of the MEK hostages

Musa Hatamian’s account of the MEK’s approach regarding the death of his mother

Members of the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) are not allowed to have any contact with their families during the decades of their presence in the Rajavi cult. They only find out that they have lost their mother when they escape from the bars of the group. The heart-breaking story of the Hatamians indicates the MEK’s hostility with the family. Like her disappeared husband, Maryam Rajavi abuses mothers, their names and their children as fuel for her propaganda machine.

Musa Hatamian is a former member of the MEK. He lives in Sweden now and he is an opponent to the Iranian Government as well as the MEK. In the article that he published on his Facebook account on the occasion of Father’s Day in Sweden, he begins his narrative with the death of his father when he was a child and then with the story of his devoted and kind mother, whose name was Tala:
“My mother Tala, after my father’s death, single-handedly took the burden of raising and educating us and that was why she was very respected by people,” Musa writes.

Musa’s other siblings were also involved in the MEK. Malakeh, the big sister was killed in 1997, according to the MEK. One of his sisters, Farah is still taken as a hostage in the MEK. When their mother was diagnosed with cancer in 2014, doctors warned the family that there was no hope for the mother to survive!

“I had defected the MEK for a few months, and my family members said that Tala kept mentioning Farah’s name and wanted to hear Farah’s voice for her farewell,” Musa Hatamian writes. “Following their cries and pleas, I asked Alan, a senior Lebanese-American UN official, to try to make Farah’s last contact with my mother, and she promised she would.”
Alan was shocked by what she saw in the MEK after she had informed Farah about her mother’s critical conditions. She had gone to the MEK’s then Liberty Camp in Baghdad to visit Farah. Musa Hatamian recounts:

When she came back, she said angrily, “I’m sorry, I couldn’t fullfil your mother’s request,” and weeping tears she continued saying, “when they brought Farah, two senior ladies of the leadership council of the MEK were with her! I said your mother is dying, and she wants to hear from you every day, I got her phone number from your brother, and you can call her. Farah seemed shocked but didn’t know what to answer. But when she looked at the two senior members of the leadership council who were speaking to her in Farsi, I don’t know why she answered me: No, I don’t want to talk to my mother!”

That moment, Alan learned something new and terrible about the MEK. “Musa, I am a girl, and I know no girl in the world can give such a response to a dying mother,” Alan cried, “I am completely shocked today, and I have come to a new understanding of the MEK’s anti-human relations.”
Tala, the mother of Musa, Farah and Malakeh died a few days later. Mayam Rajavi’s propaganda TV channel and websites offered condolences on the death of Tala but under this name: “Mother of Martyr Malakeh”. You are respected in the MEK only if you are dead.

November 20, 2023 0 comments
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Mostafa Qaedi Mom - Montaha Zahraei
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Letter of Mostafa Qaedi’s mother to Albanian Prime Minister

Mr. Prime Minister,
I am Montaha Zahrai; A mother who has been longing to see her son for several years. My son Mostafa Qaedi has been imprisoned in an organization called Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) for 35 years.
The MEK is based in your country, Albania. I don’t know how I can visit my child in your country, Albania. The MEk led by Maryam Rajavi does not allow my son to contact his mother. I suffered hardships and pains in the absence of my child. My son was studying at the university when he was in Iran, when the MEK tricked him to join them out of Iran and transferred him to a Camp Ashraf, Iraq and cut off his contact with me.

Who understands my pain?! The MEK brainwashes my child and has turned family into an enemy in my child’s mind. I request you to open the way to travel to Albania so that I can meet my child closely. Please, Pay attention to the words of a grieving mother.
Sincerely

Montaha Zahrai, Mother of Mostafa Qaedi

November 19, 2023 0 comments
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Rahim Sohrabi Family
The cult of Rajavi

Rahim, a successful entrepreneur kidnapped by the MEK in Romania

Rahim Sohrabi was a businessman in Romania when he was deceived by the recruiters of the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) to join the group in Iraq.

In 1998, Rahim Sohrabi was an Iranian immigrant living in Romania as a successful entrepreneur. MEK recruiters tried to seduce him under the cover of developing a bigger business in France, but he was soon taken to Camp Ashraf, Iraq where he was recruited as a soldier of the group’s so-called National Liberation Army.

Since then, Rahim’s family had no news of him. He was not allowed to contact his family anymore. “We have not seen our beloved brother for decades,” his sister, Fatemeh writes in a letter to the UNHCR. “Maryam and Massoud Rajavi have deprived us from our human rights.”

Fatemeh Sohrabi is concerned about the fate of her brother who has lost his money and health in the MEK. “They beat and tortured my brother because he wanted his money back,” she writes.
She has written several letters to the Albanian authorities and the International human rights body asking for aids to release her brother from the bars of the Cult of Rajavi.

Fatemeh Sohrabi is a member of Nejat Society, Mazandaran office. In her recent visit to Nejat Society, she said, “My brother is not young anymore. What a pity! Rajavi waisted his life.”

November 18, 2023 0 comments
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