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  • #91
    The Bush administration inherited many of Iraq's problems when it invaded that country, including an Iranian terrorist organization funded and armed by Saddam Hussein, the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MKO). Though in the midst of a war on terror, the Bush administration chose in 2003 to protect 3,000 of the organization's militants and house them in a camp given to the group by Saddam — Camp Ashraf just north of Baghdad.

    Ever since, the fate of this State Department-listed terrorist organization has been unclear. Hated by Iraqis for its involvement in Saddam's crimes against the Iraqi people, the Baghdad government wants to expel the group. But no country is willing to take them.

    Though the Iranian government wants to put the group's leadership on trial in Iran, it seems less interested in the organization's rank and file. The European governments have little interest in taking in 3,000 battle-hardened Muslim militants, fearing that they will use Europe as a base to plan and execute further terrorist attacks.

    The U.S., on the other hand, has already contradicted its own principles by giving preferential treatment to an organization on the State Department's terrorist list — even though President Bush himself pointed to the organization's patronage under Saddam Hussein as evidence of Iraq's support for international terrorists in his speech to the United Nations in September 2002.

    "Iraq continues to shelter and support terrorist organizations that direct violence against Iran," President Bush said. To complicate matters further, if reports that the U.S. has used MKO terrorists for cross-border raids into Iran are true, then Washington certainly doesn't want these militants to end up in Iranian hands.

    Washington seems doomed if it does, doomed if it doesn't.

    Members of the terrorist organization have protested outside the White House this past week, angered by the Bush administration's decision to hand over Camp Ashraf to the Iraqi government. The government of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki will surrender the MKO members to Tehran, they argue, who in turn will imprison and execute them.

    Though approximately 500 MKO fighters have been repatriated to Iran and no reports of abuse have emerged according to the International Committee of the Red Cross, which oversaw their return, sending rank-and-file Mujahedin members to Iran against their will would be irresponsible.

    Hated by the Iranian people for having fought on Saddam's side in the Iraq-Iran war, the Iranian Mujahedin is understandably fearful of the fate awaiting them in Iran. After all, the Iranian government systematically violates the human rights of journalists and union leaders alike, let alone anti-Iranian terrorists.

    Yet, contrary to the protesters outside the White House, the issue is not a choice between freedom in Camp Ashraf and captivity in Iran.

    The Mujahedin is not an effective opposition to the unpopular government in Iran as the organization's defenders in Washington claim, but a politico-religious cult that brainwashes its members, places children of Mujahedin members with other families in order to prevent parents from defecting, and who according to Human Rights Watch, maintains control by torturing its rank and file. "Members who try to leave the Mujahedin pay a very heavy price," according to Joe Stork of Human Rights Watch.

    Its involvement in terrorism is undisputed. It assassinated several Americans in Iran in the 1970s. It supported the taking of the U.S. Embassy in Iran and blasted Ayatollah Khomeini for releasing the American diplomats in 1981, arguing instead that the hostages should have been executed. It made a pact with Saddam Hussein in the 1980s and fought alongside his army against their Iranian countrymen. Later in the 1990s, they became Saddam's most trusted henchmen, tasked with quelling Kurdish and Shiite uprisings against the Iraqi dictator.

    According to defectors, Mujahedin members in Camp Ashraf celebrated the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

    In 2004, French authorities descended upon the Mujahedin headquarters in France, arresting the leader of the cult, Maryam Rajavi. Immediately, zealous Mujahedin members staged hunger strikes and several set themselves ablaze. Hardly the behavior of a democratically oriented opposition group.

    But the vast majority of the Camp Ashraf residents are not so much members of a terrorist cult as they are victims of it. The camp is itself a prison. It may have provided Mujahedin militants with protection against ordinary Iraqis who sought to avenge their relatives killed by the Mujahedin at the behest of Saddam Hussein, but the prison has primarily enabled the leaders of the terrorist organization to prevent the rank and file from defecting.

    Rather than debating where to expel the Mujahedin terrorists, help should be provided to the rank and file to break with the cult and make free choices about their future. It's the only humanitarian solution to this dilemma - and one that defeats rather than protects this anti-American terrorist group.

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    • #92
      "Month of Uprising"

      Mojahedin Khalgh statement on increasing protests in Iran

      [ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rnbsIbo3F4"]YouTube - ettelaie sazman mojahedin khalgh iran darbare eterazate meh[/ame]

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      • #93
        MKO are #27 on U.S DOD foreign terrorist list.
        I cannot believe people actually follow these terrorists!

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        • #94

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          • #95

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            • #96
              سازمان مجاهدين خلق روز شنبه به شدت به طرح های بغداد برای جابجايی احتمالی اعضای اين گروه در داخل عراق در صورت عدم ترک داوطلبانه اين کشور از سوی آنها، اعتراض کرده است.

              بيش از سه هزار عضو سازمان مجاهدين خلق هم اکنون در اردوگاه اشرف در نزديکی مرز ايران تحت نظر نيروهای عراقی هستند و طی چند ماه گذشته به شدت برای ترک عراق تحت فشار دولت اين کشور بوده اند.

              يک مقام ارشد عراقی روز جمعه از طرح های احتمالی برای جابجايی اين افراد به نقاطی ديگر در عراق خبر داده بود که با واکنش شديد مجاهدين روبرو شده است.

              دبيرخانه شوراى ملى مقاومت ايران، شاخه سياسی سازمان مجاهدين خلق، روز شنبه در بيانيه ای نوشت: "انتقال ساكنان اشرف مطلقا غيرقانونى، از مصاديق بارز جنايت عليه بشريت و زمينهساز يك فاجعه انسانى است."

              موفق الربيعی مشاور امنيت ملی عراق روز جمعه در بغداد به خبرنگاران گفته بود: "هنوز تصميم نهايی در باره جابجايی اعضای سازمان مجاهدين گرفته نشده، اما دوره اقامت آنها در عراق به زودی به پايان می رسد".

              وی توضيح داد که دولت عراق در پی يافتن مراکز ديگری در غرب و جنوب عراق برای اسکان دادن ساکنان اشرف است.

              در بيانيه سازمان مجاهدين خلق آمده است: "ساكنان اشرف هرگز خانه و شهرى كه 23سال است در آن زندگى مىكنند و همه چيز آنرا خود ساختهاند، ترک نخواهند كرد."


              آقای ربيعی بار ديگر اعضای سازمان مجاهدين را "تروريست های خارجی که به طور غير قانونی در عراق سکونت دارند" خواند و گفت دولت عراق آنها را نمی خواهد چون حضورشان به روابط اين کشور با ايران خدشه وارد می کند.

              او افزود: "نمی خواهيم به ايران بهانه دخالت در امور داخلی خود را بدهيم".

              اما شورای ملی مقاومت ايران در بيانيه اش در پاسخ به اظهارات آقای ربيعی چنين نوشت: "برخلاف حرفهاى ربيعى حضور مجاهدين در عراق كاملاًًًًًًً قانونى است. آنها پناهندگان سياسى و افراد حفاظت شده تحت كنوانسيون چهارم ژنو هستند و اخراج اجبارى آنها از عراق و يا جابجايى اجبارى آنها در عراق نقض پرنسيپهاى شناخته شده بينالمللى از جمله قانون انساندوستانه بينالمللى و در عداد جنايت عليه بشريت است. طبق آرتيكل 7 اساسنامه دادگاه جنايى بينالمللى جابجايى يك جمعيت از مصاديق جنايت عليه بشريت است."

              آيت الله علی خامنه اي، رهبر جمهوری اسلامي، يک ماه پيش در جريان سفر جلال طالبانی رئيس جمهوری عراق به تهران او را برای اجرای آنچه "توافق دو جانبه در خصوص اخراج" مجاهدين از عراق خواند تحت فشار گذاشت.

              جلال خالدي، خبرنگار در بغداد، در گفتگو با بی بی سی به نقل از يکی از مشاوران آقای ربيعی گفت که دولت عراق تصميم دارد پيش از خارج کردن اعضای سازمان مجاهدين خلق از اين کشور، مقدمات بستن اردوگاه اشرف را فراهم کند.

              به گفته آقای خالدي، مشاور آقای ربيعی به او گفته است: "دولت در اولين گام سعی می کند اعضای مجاهدين خلق را به اردوگاهی در نزديکی مرز عراق با دو کشور سوريه و اردن منتقل کند اما سران اين گروه را موقتا در بغداد اسکان دهد".

              کنترل اردوگاه اشرف که اعضای سازمان مجاهدين خلق ايران در آن تحت نظر هستند، اواخر تابستان 2008 برای اولين بار از زمان حمله سال ۲۰۰۳ نيروهای آمريکايی به عراق، به نيروهای عراقی محول شد.

              اين اردوگاه واقع در شرق استان دياله که هم مرز ايران است در دهه ۱۹۸۰ پس از گريز هزاران عضو سازمان مجاهدين خلق به عراق به پايگاه اصلی اين گروه بدل شد.

              اردوگاه اشرف در شرق استان دياله در نزديکی مرز ايران واقع است و بيش از ۳۴۰۰ تن از اعضای سازمان مجاهدين خلق ايران در آن سکونت دارند.

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              • #97
                Camp Ashraf Protection Campaign
                Mojahedin Khalgh supporters rally in front of White House

                On Friday, May 8, 2009, activists from the "Ashraf Protection Campaign" staged a rally in Lafayette Park, across the street from the White House. This is the 100th day that they have done so. They are concerned about preventing "a looming humanitarian crisis in Camp Ashraf," according to their press release. Camp Ashraf is located in the town of Khalis, in Iraq, "nearly 50 miles from the Iranian border". About 4000 men, women and children -- all political refugees from Iran -- currently reside in the camp. This an interview with Sahand Khosbaten, a PR representative for the group.
                [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OWuzCnG7v7k[/ame]

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                • #98
                  Iraqi police enter Camp Ashraf

                  Pressure builds on Mojahedin

                  BAQUBA, Iraq, May 28 (UPI) -- A group representing an Iranian opposition movement in Iraq claims Iraqi police entered their Diyala enclave at the pressure of the clerical regime in Tehran. Some 3,400 members of the opposition People's Mujahedin of Iran reside at the Camp Ashraf enclave in Diyala province under the protection of the Iraqi army. In a media statement, the National Council of Resistance of Iran, an umbrella organization representing the PMOI, claims Iraqi police entered Camp Ashraf on Thursday to answer Iranian calls to "implement bilateral agreements."

                  The U.S. military had offered protection to the PMOI under international law. The Iraqi military assumed security responsibility over Camp Ashraf as part of the bilateral agreement defining U.S. military authority.


                  [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y5grN-5v40w[/ame]

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