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Torture in the MEK Cult
Former members of the MEK

Farhad Javaher Yar speaks of torture and solitary confinement in the MEK

Farhad Javaheri Yar, former member of the Mujahedin-e Khalq wrote his autobiography in 2003 after he defected the group. His book titled “From Evin to Abu Ghraib” covers some extents of the MEK’s crimes against its own members who had once joined the group trustfully. His Autobiography indicates how shallow the MEK’s slogans for freedom and democracy are.

According to Javaheri’s account, the MEK is a one-way path; a blocked path with no exit door. The rank and file of the group must be robots or modern slaves who have no idea of their own. Once they enter the MEK, they have to leave all their believes, interests, plans and in general their whole life behind.

MEK Cult

In the beginning of his book, Javaheri explains why he decided to leave the MEK and how his decision was reacted by the group leaders:

When in 1994, hundreds of the group members were tortured and, in some cases, killed by the group commanders, I declared my demand to leave the group.

The group’s strategy of armed struggle in the streets had been defeated so Massoud Rajavi and his partners had to explain about their failure. But, instead of giving a logical and precise answer to the rank and file, they took action to eliminate dissident members and as always, their pretext was that dissident members were agents of the Islamic Republic who had penetrated the MEK.

A large number of members were imprisoned and tortured to sign forced confessions admitting that they were agents of the Iranian Intelligence Ministry while they were professional members of the group whose lifetime of membership in the MEK was longer than the lifetime of the Ministry of Intelligence of the Islamic Republic.

It was a trick used by Massoud Rajavi to cope with his problems at the time. The internal elimination process was a classified secret of the group. No one dared to talk about it.

I got to know about it by one of my friends who had been tortured. Eventually I asked to leave the group. There were a lot of other members of the group who had declared their defection. The group leaders launched an organizational suppressive and intimidating project to stop us from defection. A large number of those who wanted to leave gave up and stayed in the group but I had made my mind. The authorities knew that I had realized about the prisons and tortures so they tried to convince me to stay but they did not succeed. I insisted.

Thus, they decided to destroy me. The other night, all of the rank and file were supposed to be in a meeting where Maryam Rajavi was going to give them a bunch of watches as gifts. “Someone called Mahmoud Mahdavieh wants to talk to you about an important issue,” I was told. “You should stay and wait for him.”

I was aware of the tactics used by the MEK to eliminate dissident members. Therefor, I broke through the barbed wires around Ashraf and the Iraqi military stations and reached the road to Baghdad. I was got near Baghdad but the forces of the Iraqi Security Service had taken control of the road with the help of high-ranking members of the MEK. I had to cross the marshes around the city to reach the road to Tikrit.

Unfortunately, the driver of the car that I got on was a security agent. He knew that the MEK and the Iraqi Security Service were looking for an Iranian man who had escaped Camp Ashraf.
He immediately delivered me to the security forces who consequently arrested me, put handcuffs on me and blindfolded me. They jailed me in a dark cell.

In response to their interrogations, I told them that I wanted to leave Iraq and asked them to submit me to the Red Cross or at least to call my family. I gave them their phone number but the Iraq officers replied that this could be possible only under the order of the higher authorities.

The higher authorities in their turn ordered to deliver me back to Camp Ashraf, to the torturers of the MEK, Nader Rafieenezhad, Farhad Olfat and Mahmoud Mahdavieh. I was under torture from 5 to 20 hours a day.

I was in solitary confinement for 5 years. During those years, I saw Massoud Rajavi 3 times. In the meeting room, in addition to me and Massoud Rajavi, Mahmoud Mahdavieh and Mahboobeh Jamshidi were there.

Rajavi had a lot of unfulfilled promises. He signed an agreement with me and asked me to write a letter to my family. I wrote the letter but immediately after he received my letter, he handed me back to his torturers.

I was jailed in Ashraf prison until I was delivered to Iraqi forces who imprisoned me in Abu Ghraib. After a year they handed me to Iranian Intelligence agents.

February 6, 2023 0 comments
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Michael Rubin
Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

Michael Rubin: Why Do Iranians Hate the Mujahedin-e-Khalq So Much?

The senior fellow of the Washington Examiner, has found it vital to warn the US politicians who advocate the MEK despite its violent history and its cult-like nature. This is the third piece written by Rubin in order to inform paid politicians that the MEK is hated by the Iranian people:

I once asked a senior American official about why he accepted honoraria from the Mujahedin-e-Khalq, or the MKO, given the group’s cultlike nature and its lack of popularity inside Iran. His response: Even if the group lied about its support, they said the right things about democracy and regime change, and so he saw no harm in collecting the cash. The regime’s fall, he said, would be a moment of truth: Either the MKO would prove itself right, or its political Ponzi scheme would collapse.

Michael Rubin

Michael Rubin

Rubin gives a comprehensive record of how he is so well-informed about the aspirations of the Iranian public in response to critics including the MEK agents who label him as the agent of the Iranian intelligence:

The problem with engaging in the MKO’s endorsement-for-cash scheme is the impact it has on ordinary Iranians. I spent seven months in Iran during the 1990s, during both the administrations of the late President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and his successor Mohammad Khatami.

MKO representatives have rejected my calls that they open their books and suggested I must do so first, suggesting that this Jewish neoconservative ex-Bush administration Iran hawk must be, if not a Manchurian candidate, then a “Mashhadian” one supporting the ayatollahs’ regime. This is silly but reflective of MKO diversion. There is no secret about my time in Iran: First Yale University and then the American Institute of Iranian Studies funded my work, which focused on language study and archival research in pursuit of a Ph.D. dissertation about telegraphy in 19th-century Iran. So too was my participation in a Tabriz conference marking the 90th anniversary of the 1909 Constitutional Revolution. I spoke on the telegraph system at the time. It was not riveting. After leaving Iran for the last time, I penned this short monograph on the history of secret societies and vigilante groups in the country.

Over the course of those seven months in the country, I engaged with hundreds if not thousands of ordinary Iranians: shopkeepers, bus drivers and passengers, grocery store clerks, doctors and lawyers; Jews, Christians, Baha’is, and Muslims; and residents from the Azeri northwest to the Baluchi southeast.

His knowledge about the Iranian public opinion is not actually restricted to his trip to Iran:

While the regime banned me from Iran more than two decades ago, I have continued my conversations. I regularly meet Iranian religious pilgrims in Iraq; it is not hard to strike up a conversation in the lounge of Baghdad or Najaf International airports. Whether in 1996 or today, there are commonalities: Iranians do not hesitate talking about their hope for change. Some were curious about the exiled shah’s son. Many just wanted a parliamentary democracy absent the ayatollahs, and to be a normal country.

There were two items, however, on which all Iranians agreed:
First, change must be internal. Iran has suffered its share of foreign interventions over the centuries, and the country has suffered because of them. No Iranian wants to be bombed or invaded. To do so would be counterproductive and, as after the 1980 Iraqi invasion, allow the regime to rally Iranians around the nationalist flag.
Second, Iranians despised the MKO. The group was an early ally of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. After Khomeini purged them as rivals, many died in his prisons, but the group’s leadership fled to Iraq.
Rubin gives a brief but accurate answer to the main question of his article, “Why Do Iranians Hate the Mujahedin-e-Khalq So Much?”
There they made two mistakes that few Iranians will forgive: They allied themselves to Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein as he was lobbing missiles into Iranian cities and killing their conscripted fathers, sons, and brothers. They also launched a wave of terror to destabilize the regime, killing hundreds of innocent bystanders in the process. Put another way, Iranians look at the MKO as Americans see American Taliban John Walker Lindh or deserter Bowe Bergdahl.

And he concludes why US politicians should not advocate the MEK with its entire history of violence, treason and cult-like attitude:

The point is this: Paying lip service to the MKO has a price. It endorses a group Iranians believe worse than the current regime. If John Walker Lindh gave money to aspiring American politicians, it would disqualify them in American eyes. For Iran’s leaders, those five-figure MKO honoraria are a godsend that deflates and delegitimizes the grassroots opposition. Americans should stand with the Iranian people, not sell them out for cash.

February 5, 2023 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization's Propaganda System

The Rajavi cult is interested in movies and cinema!

A report received from a reliable source from Albania indicates that the Mojahedin-e Khalq Orgnization (MEK, MKO, Rajavi Cult) has contacted several television channels in this country and has entered into negotiations with them to broadcast the two films “ARGO” and “September of Shiraz” with Albanian subtitles, offering to pay a huge amount of money.

This report adds: “The MEK is also trying to show the espionage series “Tehran” on one of our televisions jointly with the Israeli non-governmental organization “Sot” (Izraeli Sot – Voice of Israel) in Albania.

“The MEK, in cooperation with pro-Israel organizations in Albania, is trying to screen the two mentioned films between January 31 and February 11,” the report states. “I see that the MEK pays special attention to films and cinema in our country”.

“ARGO” produced in 2012 and “September of Shiraz” in 2015 are political dramas that are based on the events after the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran.

The television series “Tehran” produced in 2020 in Israel tells the story of a Mossad agent who enters his hometown Tehran to carry out espionage and sabotage missions.

Recently, there were reports that the political activities of the MEK were limited in Albania, and even Edi Rama said in a talk with the New York Times reporter that the condition of accepting the MEK in Albania with the agreement of the UNHCR was that they do not have political activities.

Apparently, the MEK want to fill the void of their political activities in Albania by showing anti-Iranian films with sensitive subjects, which have not received much attention at the international level.

February 5, 2023 0 comments
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Malek Beit Mashaal
The cult of Rajavi

MEK Commander: Why didn’t you throw rock at families?

According to the ruling of Massoud Rajavi, the leader of the Mujahedin-e Khalq , family is an enemy who should be subdued. Every member of the MEK has to fight against his or her family because based on Rajavi’s indoctrinations, family is an obstacle in the path toward the cause of the group.

Malek Beitmashal, a defector of the MEK who left the group after it was relocated in Albania, writes about his own experience on the MEK’s hostile approach towards families. Families of the MEK members have not been allowed by the group leaders to contact or meet their loved ones in the MEK for over long years.
“The MEK leaders argued that family is our enemy,” Malek writes, “They used to show us movies in which partisans would betray their group because of their families.”

Malek Beit Mashaal

Malek Beit Mashaal; former MEK member in Albania

This way Malek was brainwashed as well as his other comrades in the group. “During those years I never missed my family. Under the influence of their indoctrinations, we were prepared to fight our families.” However, Malek is grateful to God that he never took action against families while they were picketing in front of the gates of Camp Ashraf, Iraq.

He recalls those days, when the MEK commanders had ordered them to attack the families who were on strike at Ashraf gates. “I saw families who came over and said hello. ‘Do you know my brother?’ A woman asked tearfully. ‘For god’s sake tell him just to wave to me!’”

Malek was moved by the heartbroken sister. He stepped back to a car. “A superior member ordered us to throw rocks at families,” he recounts. “Everyone began throwing rocks but I started smoking behind the car.”

His disobedience led to punishment. He writes, “When we got back to the unit, interrogation was started. From the Commander of our unit to my direct higher rank were asking me why I did not throw rocks at families.”

The interrogations lasted for two weeks. Malek was under suppression of the Cult of Rajavi because he had refused to do an inhuman act.

February 1, 2023 0 comments
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Camp Ashraf 3 in Albania
The cult of Rajavi

Inside the MEK: Cellphone Forbidden

Using cellphone can be a distracter to accomplish your tasks but who denies that cellphones have opened the door to be able to communicate in different ways (text message, social media messaging, photos, etc.) However, there are still some people out there who are banned from having cellphones: Members of the Mujahedin-e Khalq .

While even kids across the world are allowed to have cellphones these days, the rank and file of the MEK who are taken as hostages in a barred camp called Ashraf 3, north of Tirana, Albania, are banned from having cellphones. Defectors of the group have bizarre experiences of forbidden cellphones inside the MEK’s cult-like group.

In the United States no law prohibits the employer from banning phone use or possession during actual work time or in a regular active working area but MEK members are not employed by the group leaders. They are not paid for the routine difficult tasks they have to accomplish every day, in Camp Ashraf. Instead, as all cult members, they are supposed to dedicate their whole life to the leaders of the cult.

Former members of the MEK who are residing in Albania have recently published their memoirs of “cellphone ban” in the MEK. Khalil Ansarian who defected the MEK in 2020 after 28 years of forced membership, writes his memoirs of the efforts made by him and his friends to find a cellphone to call their family from inside the MEK. Sarfaraz Rahimi also writes how a cellphone rescued him from the group.

Camp Ashraf in Albania

Camp Ashraf 3 in Albania

According to Ansarian, after the MEK was relocated in Albania and since the group was under the scrutiny of a democratic society, Massoud Rajavi decided to pay his rank and file for the first time. “Each member was paid 8 dollars per month,” he writes. “After three decades we had 8 dollars in our pockets.”

One of his friends suggests Khalil buying one cellphone by sharing their money. As they had no idea of mobile technology, the first cellphone that they secretly bought was so old that no application could be installed on it. So, they did not succeed to contact their families after long years of separation. They planned to buy another one.

“This time we bought a used cellphone for 40 dollars,” he recounts. “The other day, my friend and I went to the hills around the camp. We tried to contact his family via Telegram by the only phone number my friend had from his family.”
They could finally get connected to his friend’s family. “We were connected!” he writes. “At first, his family could not believe him. They could not believe that their son was alive after so many years.”

Nevertheless, it was not easy to contact your family even if you had a cellphone. “We had to change the place of contact every day, “Khalil Ansarian states. “The suppressive agents of Rajavi would constantly patrol around the camp watching the rank and file.”

Sarfaraz Rahimi the MEK defector who left the MEK six years ago and married an Albanian girl, writes, “The leaders of the MEK know well that if members have cellphones, they will immediately call their families. Having been connected to the outside world, they will realize the reality of the world. Thus, the MEK does not allow members to have cellphones.”
Sarfaraz writes about his personal experience after he found a cellphone to call his family. “It was because of the cellphone that I learned that I was a hostage of the MEK,” he states. “When I started having daily contacts with my family and I surfed the Internet, I got to know that the truth was not what the MEK gave us. Every day, the truth became clearer. I realized why the MEK was against cellphone. Because it would open connections with the world outside the walls of Ashraf.”

January 30, 2023 0 comments
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Beheshti Mostafa
Former members of the MEK

Rajavi did not allow him to call his sick mother

Mostafa Beheshti’s mother passed away in April, 2018 while she was languishing for her beloved son who was imprisoned by the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization. Mostafa was never allowed to call his sick mother.
Mostafa was smuggled by the MEK recruiters from Iran to the MEK’s headquarters in Iraq, Camp Ashraf. He was taken as a hostage for 21 years. He was never allowed to contact his family in all those years.
He writes about the reason on his Facebook account. “The MEK is terrified of its members’ defecting,” he writes. “Thus, it is against any kind of contact or visit with families.” He explains that the tactic is used by the MEK authorities under the direct ruling of Massoud Rajavi. “In a series of meeting, Massoud Rajavi would define family as the enemy of the MEK,” Mostafa writes. “He said, ‘Family means enemy; means Iranian Intelligence Ministry!”

This is why Mostafa could never call his mother even though she was sick in hospital when she sent a video message in the hope that Mostafa will find the chance to watch it from inside the MEK. The video was published by Nejat Society website just a few days before the death of that heart-broken mother.
“Even when my mother published a video from her hospital bed and asked me to contact her, the MEK leaders did not allow me to call her,” Mostafa Beheshti sadly states.

Mostafa Beheshti was actually deceived by a fake letter allegedly written by his brother Morteza who had been some years earlier recruited by the MEK in Turkey. Morteza was married and had a little son (Alireza) when he went to turkey to find a good job, make money and get back to his family. Unfortunately, he could never return home after he was smuggled to Iraq, by the MEK recruiters in Turkey. In April 2010, Morteza was killed in Camp Ashraf.

During all those years the Beheshtis had no accessible way to contact their two sons. After the killing of Morteza, they made efforts to release the second son but they were not permitted to contact or visit him. Their sister, Narges who had previously traveled to Iraq several times, took actions that had no outcome.

Mostafa was only able to leave the MEK after the group was relocated in Albania. Mostafa could ultimately manage to leave the group in 2020. He is now an active member of the Association for the Support of Iranians living in Albania (ASILA).

January 29, 2023 0 comments
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Mother
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

The mother of Taymaz Vahedi ask for the release of her son from the MEK

The mother of Taymaz Vahedi a hostage of the Mujahedin-e Khalq calls on the international community to aid the release of her son from the group.

In 2001, Taymaz was a young boy when he was smuggled to Iraq by the MEK recruiters. He had gone to Turkey to work in the hope of building a better life but he fell into the trap of the MEK as well as a large number of other Iranian youth in Turkey, during those years.

Since then, Taymaz has not contacted his family any more. His family only got to know about him from defectors of the MEK. His mother is very sick now but at least she knows that her son is alive and resides in Albania. She has been looking forward to see his son or at least hear his voice on phone during the 22 past years.
The Vahedis have so far sent several letters to the international human rights bodies and the Albanian authorities calling for investigations on the violation of the most basic human rights of members inside the cult-like group of Maryam Rajavi.

Human rights bodies, the International community and the Albanian authorities should provide the conditions for Taymaz to contact his languishing mother so that she –who has longed to hear her child’s voice for more than two decades– can achieve her desire.

January 28, 2023 0 comments
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Mostafa Beheshti
The cult of Rajavi

Mostafa Beheshti’s testimony on sexual harassment in the MEK

Mostafa Beheshti former member of the Mujahedin-e Khalq testified that he was sexually harassed when he was a member of the group.
It can be hard to talk about an experience with sexual harassment. Sexual abuse takes away dignity and self-confidence and sometimes a victim may not speak up for years due to the mental trauma. However, two years after defection from the MEK, Mostafa spoke out on his Facebook account.

Mostafa Beheshti

Mostafa Beheshti

Mostaf Beheshti who is now a member of the Association for the support of Iranians Living Albania (ASILA) tries hard to reveal facts on the true nature of the MEK by posting his memoirs in his social media accounts. This time he revealed his untold story of being sexually harassed by a Mujahed nurse in the clinic of Camp Ashraf.

“I went to the camp’s clinic because of asthma,” Mostafa writes. “I talked to the nurse about my problem. He told me to lie down on the bed and take of my pants so that he can examine. He then locked the door.”

Mostafa wondered why he was told to take his pants off while Asthma is a chronic disease that affects the airways of lungs. He asked about it. “Your body need Oxygen!” he was answered by the nurse.

The nurse brought him a pill and a glass of water. “Take it to get better,” he said. After taking the pill, Mostafa felt lethargic and fell asleep. He recounts, “After 20 minutes, I woke up I saw the nurse touching my penis. Being so shocked I told him ‘What are you doing with me!?’”

“The nurse was scared,” Mostafa continues. “He asked me not to tell the authorities.” However, Mostafa went to his direct higher rank and told him. The man got upset but he took no action.

Mostafa’s direct supervisor told him, “If I tell the authorities about it, they will not accept. I have witnessed several cases like the one that happened to you but finally we will be accused, not the abuser.”

Today, as a member of ASILA association Mostafa believes that such revelations about what is going on inside Ashraf 3 can help the world know the MEK and this might aid release the people who are still taken as hostages in the group’s camp called Ashraf 3 in Albania.

January 25, 2023 0 comments
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The father of Farhad Saadat
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Farhad Saadat has been never allowed to contact his family

The father of Farhad Saadat, a hostage of the Mujahedin-e Khalq sent a video message to his son.

Farhad have been imprisoned under the Rajavis’ modern slavery for over 34 years. He was a 20-year-old soldier in the Iran-Iraq war when he was taken as a war prisoner by Iraqi forces. He was then deceived by the MEK recruiters to join the group, in 1988.
Farhad has been never allowed to contact his family during these over three-decade-long separation. Expressing his concern over the health of Farhad, his father asks him to contact his family.

to download the video file click here

January 24, 2023 0 comments
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Hossein Ali Rigi, the brother of Barat Ali Rigi
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Video message to a brother taken as hostage in the MEK

Hossein Ali Rigi, the brother of Barat Ali Rigi asks him to leave the Mujahedin-Khalq (MEK/ PMOI). Barat has been taken as a hostage by the MEK for over three decades. He has never been allowed by the group leaders to visit his family. In the Video message, his brother asks him to think independently and leave the group in order to have a normal life in the free world.

to download the vide file click here

January 23, 2023 0 comments
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