Speaking to reporters at a weekly briefing, Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi expressed hope for a proper and fair treatment of this dangerous group by the French Judiciary in order to prevent the terrorist group from further crimes.
All countries should treat terrorists in accordance with the international law, he said.
In a major French crackdown nearly two weeks ago against the MKO’s local headquarters in Auvers-sur-Oise and sites outside
The notorious terrorist Maryam Rajavi is a dangerous cult figure who, with her husband, Massoud Rajavi, has led a terrorist movement that sold out to
What is not in dispute is that the Mujahedeen Khalq, or People's Mujahedeen, the Iraq-based Iranian opposition group the Rajavis lead, has been designated a terrorist organization by both the United States State Department and the 15-country European Union. Now, in an unintended consequence of the American-led war against
The collapse of Mr. Hussein's government has left the fate of thousands of Iraq-based Mujahedeen followers, including heavily armed troops, in American hands. A major French crackdown nearly two weeks ago against the group's local headquarters in Auvers-sur-Oise and sites outside
"We could no longer tolerate an organization that was expanding its terrorist operations, and we feared that it could start organizing and planning attacks from French soil," said Pierre de Bousquet, the director of the Directorate for Territorial Surveillance,
The French government has given political asylum, and even police protection, to the Mujahedeen for more than two decades. But since last fall, Mr. de Bousquet said, French intelligence noticed the arrival of an increasing number of Mujahedeen members and, after the
"This is by no means a political movement, a democratic movement," Mr. de Bousquet said. "It was not preparing the restoration of democracy in
What makes the Mujahedeen difficult to decipher is that it has at least two aspects. One operates a highly regimented operation from inside
The other has offices in capitals around the world under the group's political arm, the National Council of Resistance, staffed by sophisticated, multilingual representatives in suits and ties. In a contradiction in American policy, the State Department lists the group's political arm as part of the Mujahedeen's terrorist network, but it is allowed to function openly in the
Since the arrest in
Danielle Mitterrand, the widow of the late French president François Mitterrand, has paid a visit in a show of support. The mayor of Auvers-sur-Oise has lent them a soccer field to use as a campsite.
For those who have studied the organization — and to some former members — it is far from being a political movement with popular support inside
"It is a mystical cult," said Ervand Abrahamian, a history professor at
The organization has long been intent on showing the outside world its positive face. While its representatives around the world publicly condemned the
"There were celebrations at all the Mujahedeen camps on Sept. 11," said Ardeshir Parkizkari, 39, a former member of the group's central council who is now a political refugee in
He explained his own rupture with the group: "You lose your identity and are not allowed to think freely. When I started having fights with them and pointed out their mistakes, they put me on trial and sent me to prison for not following the leader's orders." He said he was beaten so badly that he now walks with a limp.
It was devotion to Mrs. Rajavi, who is about 50 years old, that led several of her supporters throughout
In interviews, Mujahedeen defectors described a brutal side of the organization in
After the 1991 Persian Gulf war, they said, the
"We were told that if the revolts succeeded in overthrowing Saddam Hussein it would be the end of our movement," said Karim Haghi, 42, a former bodyguard of the Rajavis who is a political refugee in
Mr. Haghi said he was jailed, and eventually escaped.
Former members said they were forced to divorce and some had their children taken from them and sent to families in
Muhammad Hosein Sobhani, 42, also a former bodyguard of the Rajavis, said in a telephone interview that he was forced to divorce his wife. Their daughter was taken out of
"They told my daughter, `Your father died in a Mujahedeen operation,' and I was forbidden to have any contact with her," he said, adding that he has since tracked down his daughter, who is now 18.
Mrs. Rajavi has political refugee status until 2006. As for Mr. Rajavi, who according to American intelligence was last known to be living in
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MNA
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