The government of Iraq, along with Iranian exiles, is called on to honor the spirit of a resettlement agreement, a U.S. State Department official said.
Baghdad and the United Nations signed a memorandum of understanding in December outlining the voluntary relocation of members of the People’s Mujahedin of Iran from their Camp Ashraf enclave in Diyala province to Camp Liberty in Baghdad.
Patrick Ventrell, a State Department spokesman, said continued dialogue, not forcible means, was the best way for the Iraq government to facilitate the transfer. Further demands, meanwhile, issued by the thousands of exiles remaining at the Diyala enclave are "unacceptable," he said.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon issued a similar appeal through his spokesman.
"He urges both sides to continue to work constructively in this regard with a view to peacefully concluding the transfer of the remaining residents as soon as possible," the statement read.
The PMOI is labeled as a terrorist organization by the US.

dissident group out of a camp in Iraq, but also urged members of the group to relocate voluntarily to a large former U.S. military base in Baghdad.
leave Camp Ashraf to cooperate with Iraqi authorities and resettle in a new refugee camp near Baghdad.
Hussein but is now out of favor with a government that is close to Iran that it must move out of the camp immediately or be forced to leave.
Hurriya.