US court demands decision on MEK’s ‘terror’ listing
A US appeals court has ordered Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to decide within four months whether a dissident Iranian group should be removed from the US terror blacklist.
| Removing the MEK from the terror blacklist would allow it to lobby the US Congress directly |
The long delays in acting on the group’s petition to be removed were "egregious", the court said.
The Mujahideen-e Khalq (MEK) had asked the court to give Mrs Clinton just 30 days to decide.
It says its presence on the list puts members living in Iraq under threat.
The MEK, also known as the People’s Mujahideen Organisation of Iran (PMOI) led a guerrilla campaign against the US-backed Shah of Iran during the 1970s and also opposed Iran’s clerical leaders who replaced the Shah.
It was given refuge in Iraq by Saddam Hussein but has fallen out of favour with Iraq’s new Shia-dominated leadership.
Members of the group have been based at a refugee camp in Iraq but Baghdad is taking steps to expel them.
In Friday’s ruling, the US Court of Appeals in Washington said the PMOI had been left in "administrative limbo" by Mrs Clinton, reported AFP news agency.
Mrs Clinton had not ruled on its petition to be removed from the terror list in 600 days, despite being given only 180 days to do so by the US Congress.
The court gave Mrs Clinton four months to rule or it would issue a so-called writ of mandamus order and remove the group from the list itself.
But the court refused to take that step immediately, citing "national security and foreign policy concerns".
Expensive campaign
In a written response, state department spokesman Mark Toner said it intended to comply with the ruling, reported Reuters news agency.
The ruling was welcomed by PMOI leader Maryam Rajavi as a "triumph of justice", AFP reported. She said maintaining the terrorist designation would be "illegitimate and unlawful".
Those backing the MEK have staged a very expensive campaign to call for the group to be removed – a move that would enable the MEK itself officially to lobby Congress, the BBC’s Bahman Kalbasi has previously reported.
But detractors say the government should not bow to the group, saying ample evidence remains to justify keeping them on the terror list.
MEK is currently campaigning to be officially delisted in the US as a terrorist organisation. Once off the list it will be free to make use of its support on Capitol Hill in order to become America’s most favoured, and no doubt best funded, Iranian opposition group.
surrendered its arms to American forces after the coalition forces invaded Iraq in 2003. But when the US officials, and in most cases pro-MKO Americans, refer to the issue of arms and Ashraf, they state that the group has been disarmed. Even those American military commanders who had responsibility for Ashraf have all attested, when coming to testify in behalf of MKO, that MKO was disarmed. For instance, as reported by MKO’s own reporting channel, “Gen. Raymond Odierno (then 4th ID commander) in a video teleconference from Baghdad on June 18, 2003, stated that MEK ‘have been completely disarmed. We have taken all small arms and all heavy equipment’.”
raised to a higher level in the “land of double standards”. Naturally we should wait for the removal of other Foreign Terrorist Organizations from the list at the proper time!
continues to be dragged out and will continue to be dragged for at least three more months, if not much longer.
e-Khalq Organization."