Friday, October 21, 2016

51 years of resistance of The People’s Mojahedin of Iran - History of Camp Ashraf and Camp Liberty







(The post- Shah Pahlavi era)

History of Camp Ashraf and Camp Liberty

A Victory for Humanity


Stes de Necker
International Diplomatic Ambassador and
President of Friends of Camp Liberty




Introduction

 
People’s Mojahedin of Iran (PMOI/MEK) is the oldest, largest, and most popular resistance organization in Iran. The PMOI was founded in September 1965 by three Iranian engineers who sought to replace the Shah’s repressive monarchy with a democratic government. 

The PMOI enjoys broad popularity in Iran because of its longstanding support for democracy and freedom.

The People’s Mojahedin participated in a united front against the Shahs monarchy, which violently opposed democratic reforms and had one of the worst human rights records in the world.

Demonstrations against the Shah commenced in October 1977, developing into a campaign of civil resistance that included both secular and religious elements and which intensified in January 1978.
Between August and December 1978 strikes and demonstrations paralyzed the country. The Shah left Iran for exile on January 16, 1979, as the last Persian monarch, leaving his duties to a regency council and an opposition-based prime minister.

After the Shah fled Iran, Ayatollah Khomeini was invited back to Iran by the government, and returned to Tehran to a greeting by several million Iranians. 

The PMOI/MEK worked to establish a democratic government, but Ayatollah Khomeini hijacked the Revolution and instead created an Islamic theocracy.

The royal reign collapsed shortly after on February 11, 1979 when guerrillas and rebel troops overwhelmed troops loyal to the Shah in armed street fighting, bringing Khomeini to official power.
Iran voted by national referendum to become an Islamic Republic on April 1, 1979, and to approve a new theocratic-republican constitution whereby Khomeini became Supreme Leader of the country, in December 1979.

The PMOI shifted course and directed its opposition against the Ayatollah, continuing its struggle to restore democracy in Iran.

On June 20, 1981, the PMOI organized rallies across Iran to protest Khomeini’s oppressive rule. More than a half million Iranians attended the demonstration in Tehran but Khomeini brutally suppressed the half a million people demonstration in Tehran and the resistance against the Khomeini regime.   On direct fatwa by Khomeini, the Hezbollah blocked off streets and fired into the growing crowds, killing hundreds of Iranians and injuring many more. Thousands of Iranians were arrested.

The reign of terror had begun

The largest 2009 uprising protests attracted crowds of more than 100,000 people in Tehran. Paramilitary Basij and police attacked the demonstrators with batons, pepper spray, and guns. Hundreds were arrested, and dozens were killed and wounded.

Camp Ashraf

Camp Ashraf was created in 1986, after the PMOI leadership relocated from France to Iraq.
Camp Ashraf has for over 25 years been home to thousands of members and sympathizers of Iran's main opposition group, the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK).

The camp is situated north of the Iraqi town of Al-Khalis in Diyala Province, about 44 miles from Iran's Western border.

It began as barren land with only a handful of deserted buildings and no facilities, paved roads, or running water. Over 25 years, however, Ashraf was built by its residents into a modern city with a complex of roads and buildings with many educational, social and sports facilities, and it became the PMOI's main enclave in Iraq.

Camp Ashraf, was named after Ashraf Rajavi, a famous political prisoner at the time of the Shah who was among the last group of political activists released from the Shah’s prisons in 1979.

One remarkable characteristic of Ashraf is the presence of thousands of people who have freely chosen to come to Ashraf with only one goal and desire—to dedicate their lives to their people’s freedom from the clutches of the mullahs’ terrorist religious dictatorship.

Prior to the 2003 U.S.-led war in Iraq, the PMOI publicly declared its neutrality and played no part in 2003 Iraq War

In April 2003, US forces signed a cease-fire agreement with the PMOI and the residents of Ashraf  Protected Persons Status under the 4th Geneva Convention

After an extensive 16-month investigation of every member of the PMOI in Camp Ashraf by seven different US government agencies that began after the US agreement, PMOI members were found not to have violated  any US law [New York Times, July 27, 2004]

The US led Multi-National Force - Iraq (MNF-I) formally recognized all the residents of Camp Ashraf as "Protected Persons" under the Fourth Geneva Convention [Coalition Statement, July 2004], and U.S. forces took up their protection.

The MNF-I reiterated its obligations towards Ashraf residents under the 4th Geneva Convention on numerous occasions.

This can be seen in a February 16, 2006 letter by the then-Deputy Commanding General, and it is also specified in the October 7, 2005, letter by Maj. Gen. William Brandenburg which says: "The residents of Camp Ashraf have the right to protection from danger, violence, coercion, and intimidation, and to special protection for the dignity and rights of women."

In January 2009, despite strong opposition by the residents and several legal opinions by distinguished jurists, the camp's security was transferred to Iraq without the necessary credible guarantees. The US stated that the Government of Iraq has given written guarantee respecting the rights of the residents.

On July 2009 and April 2011, the Iraqi Army under the direct order of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki launched deadly attacks on Camp Ashraf.

The first attack left 11 Ashraf residents dead and nearly 500 wounded.

The second attack during 2011 - described by then U.S. Senator John Kerry, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, as a "massacre" - left 36 dead and hundreds wounded. The attacks drew widespread condemnation from the international community.

Since 2009, the camp has been under a barbaric siege where delivery of food, fuel and medicine has been hampered and visits by family members, human rights organizations, residents' lawyers, and independent journalists have been disallowed.

Camp Liberty

Following an agreement between Ambassador Martin Kobler of UNAMI and the Government of Iraq, and at the behest of the Iranian regime, Ashraf residents were subject to a forced eviction and involuntary relocation to Camp Liberty, a former U.S.-base in Baghdad.

Martin Kobler, the Special Representative of the UN Secretary General in Iraq, misled the residents and the international community by repeated assurances about the residents welfare and protection at the new site which has proved to be blatantly false.

In 2012, some 3,200 residents were moved to Camp Liberty, but Iraq has denied them freedom of movement, basic humanitarian needs, and the right to transfer or sell most of their property.Martin Kobler, the Special Representative of the UN Secretary General in Iraq (SRSG), gave the residents repeated assurances about their welfare and protection at the new site. But the Government of Iraq (GoI) has imposed a siege on the camp and denied them the right to transfer or sell most of their property.

In violation of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed between Iraq and the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI), Camp Liberty lacks human rights standards and was considered a prison from every aspect.

The area of the camp is half a square kilometre, and it is run by Iraqi Col. Sadeq Mohammad Kazem, who is wanted by a Spanish court for ordering his troops to open fire on Ashraf residents in the massacres of July 2009 and April 2011.

There is a central police station and at least five other police posts and uninterrupted patrols in the small camp. Surveillance cameras have been installed in various areas of the camp to control all commuting inside. The signals from these eavesdropping devices and spying cameras are transmitted to the Iranian regime, leading to serious security threats to the residents and their families in Iran.

Residents have no freedom of movement, and Iraq has banned them from having access to their relatives, human rights activists, parliamentarians, reporters and any foreign visitor in Liberty or Ashraf.

Heavy medical restrictions are imposed on the camp residents, and this has led to the death of two residents by the start of 2013. The ground is gravel, and there are no pavements. The Iraqi Government (GoL)does not permit contractors into the camp to build stable ramp entries for the disabled.

Residents are not allowed to use machinery and the GoI prevents them from transferring their forklifts from Ashraf to move items and do construction work in Camp Liberty. The residents were forced to carry heavy loads by hand leading to numerous injuries.

Iraq refuses to connect the camp to the national electricity grid, and the few power generators that are in the camp were dilapidated. By December 2012, Liberty residents had paid $3.5 million for fuel for generators at the camp to provide electricity and $2.5 million for a water supply project.

The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention on 23 November 2012 described conditions at Camp Liberty as synonymous with that of a detention centre and in violation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

This was the second opinion adopted by the Working Group detailing abuses at the camp. Another opinion issued on 17 July 2012 found similar abuses taking place.

Mr. Tahar Boumedra, SRSG's advisor on Ashraf affairs, who was responsible for Ashraf at the UNAMI for three and a half years resigned in May 2012 in protest to Martin Kobler’s attempts to cover up violations of human rights at Camp Liberty. In two shocking testimonies at the U.S. Congress on 13 September 2012 and the UK Parliament on 11 December 2012, Mr. Boumedra revealed how Ambassador Kobler would manipulate reports to cover up the abuses.

Instead of designating Camp Liberty as a refugee camp, the camp has been illegally designated a “temporary transit location - TTL” to cover up the appalling lack of minimum standards for a refugee camp and violation of laws and regulations related to refugees and asylum seekers.

The term TTL applies to a camp which has a several-day or several-week passage for transferring refugees to third countries.

Many distinguished international jurists, Parliamentarians, former government officials, human rights advocates, and human rights organizations have urged the UN to urgently recognize Camp Liberty as an official Refugee Camp and accept responsibility for the residents’ protection and to ensure that their rights are respected under international law

Successful resettlement of Camp Liberty

Owing to the efforts of the Iranian Resistance, the United States Congress introduced a number of resolutions and passed legislation, obligating the U.S. Government to undertake the necessary measures to protect the residents of Liberty and to safely transfer them out of Iraq.

Similar resolutions and declarations were also adopted in the European Parliament, and in parliaments in the United Kingdom, as well as in other European and Middle Eastern countries.On July 19, 2016, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees stated, “UNHCR is supporting a steady and growing stream of movements out of Iraq in coming months. It is hoped that the process will be completed well before year end. This progress has been achieved with the cooperation of the residents who have proceeded with the relocation process despite difficult circumstances, including the attack on 4 July 2016, which fortunately did not result in any casualties.”

On Friday September 9, 2016, the last 280 members of PMOI in Camp Liberty, left Iraq safely for Albania, marking the successful conclusion of the four-and-a-half-year-long process of relocating members of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) to places of safety.

The relocation of the residents has not been achieved without cost, however. The regime used its influence with the Iraqi authorities to ensure that residents were not permitted to take any personal possessions and that collective resources were disposed of without compensation. 

In the course of the process to resettle Camp Liberty residents, Iraqi intelligence agents, acting at the behest of the Iranian regime’s ambassador to Iraq (a commander of the terrorist Quds Force), prevented the residents from taking with them their personal belongings, such as computers, radios, cell phones, and even electric shavers.

The goal of the Iranian regime was not to see the departure of PMOI members from Iraq; rather, it sought to annihilate or force them into surrender.

The victorious transfer of the PMOI members and regime’s major defeat in this regard, which takes place simultaneous with growing calls seeking justice for 30,000 political prisoners massacred in 1988, opens a new chapter for the Iranian people and the PMOI. 

After 4 years of heroic resistance and countless international efforts by thousands of Political dignitaries and Parliamentarians all over the globe, the history of Camps Ashraf and Liberty resulted in a victorious conclusion and resettlement that enjoyed international congratulations.        


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