Responses of Mojahedin, Rajavi and National Council of Resistance of Iran to Allegations of Human Rights Abuses and War Crimes
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The following are excerpts from many official websites of the Mojahedin-e Khalq and National council of Resistance of Iran; including ncri-iran.org the official website of National Council of Resistance (also band in USA, still working in EU) This has been Massoud and Maryam Rajavi's only response to the allegations of human rights abuses and war crimes committed over a twenty-five year period, which have been consistently raised by former members of their cult, the Mojahedin-e Khalq, as well as human rights organisations, in particular, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, and the governments across the globe which have added the Mojahedin to their lists of terrorist entities. We apologies to Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne and to Mr Win Griffiths, former MP for Bridgend, Wales, (not forgetting Mr Ebrahim Khodabandeh, outspoken critic of Rajavi and his cult), for again publishing the lies created by the Mojahedin about them and on their behalf. We believe that it is in the public interest to expose these lies. The Rajavi cult has embarked on a campaign of misinformation to whitewash its record of human rights abuses and crimes against humanity under the protection of its benefactor Saddam Hussein. Rajavi believes that by doing so the Mojahedin may once more be used by some new masters as mercenaries against their own country (someone who would be willing to wear the dirty boots of Saddam and start paying them to carry out their terrorist acts). For more information about the Mojahedin, Rajavi and the National Council of Resistance misinformation campaign (and their more serious criminal activities) in western countries please contact: Email: info@iran-interlink.org IRAN-INTERLINK Excerpt from Mojahedin (Rajavi cult) website Iran-interlink.info Who is behind UK based Iran-Interlink Organisation?
Massoud Khodabandeh and his British wife Ann Singleton run the site from their home in Leeds. Both were formerly associated with the dissident Iranian Mojahedin. Singleton was never a member it seems. She became affiliated with Mojahedin supporters in London in the late 80's and eventually tagged along with some supporters to go to Iraq to visit the Iranian opposition's National Liberation Army camp for a two month period in the early 90's. The NLA was in Iraq since 1986 for the purpose of offering viable resistance to the Iranian regime from the only neighboring state that was possible. Singleton left Iraq after finding herself out of place in a struggle she really didn't believe in.
They would initially provide intelligence for assassination attempts on resistance activists on European soil and would later lead a vast disinformation campaign to demonise the Mojahedin and ostracise them within Europe and the US where they had a large following. It should be noted that possibly hundreds of former members and supporters have left the ranks of the Mojahedin in its 40 year history for personal reasons. But most still continue to support the Mojahedin by attending protest actions, providing financial support, and participating in grass-roots activities to raise awareness about the issue of democracy in Iran. The Khodabandehs however decided, like a handful of former members, to cast their lot with the Iranian regime and get involved in the MOIS covert operation. In the political struggle between the Iranian opposition and the Iranian regime of the ayatollahs, Khodabandeh likes to strike a neutral tone, never offering any criticism of his government's support for terrorism, its support of fundamentalist groups, its irresponsible policy of pursuing nuclear weapons, nor of the regime's human rights violations in Iran. Most would however say that his fervent attacks on the Mojahedin belie his skewed political sympathies and question his expensive lifestyle of jetting to various countries to attack a group which in the general balance of power offsets the mullahs' murderous rule over Iran. It seems Singleton volunteered to help save her new brother-in-law, Mr. Ebrahim Khodabandeh, who was later arrested and extradited to Iran by Syrian authorities while in Syria on the eve of the Gulf War. Ebrahim Khodabandeh has since recanted and is actively engaged in a propaganda war against the PMOI. During her month-long visit to Iran, Ms. Singleton met her mother-in-law and asked her to exert pressure on her son (Ebrahim) to leave the Mojahedin. Ebrahim's mother later admitted to him that the regime allowed her to leave Iran for a visit to the UK to see Ebrahim the previous year on condition that she would “help” him leave the resistance and return to Iran. Ebrahim Khodabandeh had while in London filed an affidavit in court proceedings confirming that Ann Singleton and his brother had setup Iran-Interlink at the behest of MOIS.
Excerpt from Mojahedin (Rajavi cult) website Iran-interlink.info Karim Haghi exposed, a MOIS agent in Europe
Excerpt from Mojahedin (Rajavi cult) website Iran-interlink.info A profile: Islamic Republic of Iran 's lobby in Europe, Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne, Member of the European Parliament
Excerpt from Mojahedin (Rajavi cult) website iranfocus.com
Excerpt from Mojahedin (Rajavi cult) website ncr-iran.org
NCRI - An agent of the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS), identified as Mohsen Abbaslou, has been dispatched to France to pose as a former member of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI). MOIS has purported that this agent has recently escaped from Camp Ashraf (main base of PMOI forces in Iraq), in a bid to make use of him in espionage and terrorist activities. News of the arrival of the MOIS agent in France comes as the clerical regime has come under extensive international condemnation for the brutal execution of Mojahedin member Hojjat Zamani and its intensified pressure on other political prisoners. The move is seen as retaliation for revelations of the mullahs’ ominous nuclear ambitions by the Iranian Resistance and the referral of its file to the UN Security Council.
Abbaslou was sent to Iraq in 2003 in a bid to infiltrate into PMOI ranks. Many of his family members and relatives are members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) and the paramilitary Basij force. Abbaslou was identified as an MOIS agent after five months in the PMOI’s entry facility and was subsequently expelled from the PMOI and transferred to the exit facility under control of US forces stationed at Camp Ashraf. A short while later, he escaped from the facility with the help of MOIS agents and went to Iran. Abbaslou was briefed in Iran by the head of MOIS, Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei, who gave him orders for his terrorist and espionage mission before sending him to Europe. Abbaslou had written that his orders from the MOIS included, “Surveillance of the PMOI leadership’s residence, identifying PMOI cadres, gaining intelligence on the venue and time of PMOI gatherings, strength of PMOI forces, types of equipment, and communications systems with forces inside of Iran, methods of recruitment from Iran and transfer of forces to Iraq, etc.” Abbaslou has never been a PMOI member or even a candidate for membership. He appeared in a ridiculous repeat performance with other known MOIS agents, Karim Haghi, Massoud Khodabandeh, Javad Firouzmand, and Behzad Alishahi. The show was boycotted by the press and there were no attendants other than the MOIS agents. Entrance to the show was limited by invitation, which was issued to those trusted by the MOIS, due to fear of protests by Iranians opposed to the clerical regime and its agents. The Iranian Resistance draws the attention of European governments, and in particular France, to the plots of MOIS agents and the Iranian regime’s espionage and terrorist networks against Iranian refugees and members and supporters of the Iranian Resistance. These agents provide political cover for the regime’s terrorist activities by engaging in a disinformation campaign to demonize the Iranian Resistance. They also gather intelligence against Iranian refugees and dissidents and act as terrorist links with the Iranian regime. The Iranian Resistance, therefore, calls on European countries to identify, prosecute, and expel these agents from their soil.
Excerpt from Mojahedin (Rajavi cult) website Iran-interlink.info Statement issued by the Committee of Anglo-Iranian Lawyers in London The Iranian regime's news agency, IRNA, reported yesterday that a press conference will be held on Thursday by a number of Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) operatives in the London office of Emma Nicholson, an MEP who has close relations with the Iranian regime, as well as MOIS past and current ministers, Ali Younessi and Gholam-Hossein Mohseni Ejei. The aim of the meeting is to accuse the "hypocrites (the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran) of being a party to the crimes perpetrated by Iraq's deposed dictator and call for the prosecution of this group." In addition to Massoud Khodabandeh, his wife, Ann Singleton, and Emma Nicholson, Alain Chevalerais, and a Dutch woman, Judith Neurink, will also take part in the meeting. This transparent tactic of the MOIS that failed miserably in the past in France, Washington, DC and The Hague, is being planned in London after a series of major political achievements by the Iranian opposition, including the 35,000-strong rally outside the European Commission Headquarters in Brussels. In that rally, the Resistance's supporters called for the referral of Tehran's nuclear file to the Security Council for the adoption of comprehensive oil and technological embargoes, and the removal of the unjust terror tag from the PMOI. British lawmakers from all three major political parties voiced their support for the PMOI as a legitimate resistance movement. They, along with a number of Euro MPs raised the demands of the Iranian people and those in the rally directly with the EU's presidency. Facing global censure and outrage over what Prime Minister Blair described as "the revolting and totally unacceptable" remarks by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad about the destruction of Israel, the Iranian regime is bidding to divert attention from its relentless pursuit of nuclear weapons and its increasingly terrorist and fundamentalist meddling in Iraq, including financing and arming groups responsible for the deaths of British troops, that has been acknowledged by many world leaders and officials, including the Prime Minister and the Foreign and Defence secretaries of Britain, the EU's rotating Presidency. Fearful of the presence of witnesses and Iranian victims of MOIS who had in similar meetings exposed the nature of the regime and its conspiracies, the organisers have made attending the 10 November meeting conditional on having an invitation, which it has already issued to its own operatives. According to a witness statement filed with the British Courts on 12 November 2002, by Ebrahim Khodabandeh, the brother of Massoud Khodabandeh (one of the main organisers of the press conference) Massoud Khodabandeh was recruited by the MOIS in the mid-1990s. He has repeatedly travelled to Tehran and East Asia for face-to-face briefings by MOIS officials as regards actions against the opposition People's Mojahedin. Ebrahim Khodabandeh also set out in his witness statement the long record of cooperation between Ann Singleton (the wife of Massoud Khodabandeh), whom IRNA has introduced as "Mojahedin's former British member" and MOIS, including her many travels to Iran. Former Labour MP, Win Griffiths, issued a letter about his humanitarian visit to the notorious Evin Prison in the summer of 2004. Evin prison is the place in which tens of thousands of political prisoners have been tortured and executed, and the Canadian-Iranian journalist Zahra Kazemi was brutally tortured, raped and then murdered. In his letter, Mr Griffiths expressed surprise at having seen Anne Singleton sitting next to interrogators and waiting to meet him in Evin. Emma Nicholson is a discredited figure, whose ties with the Iranian regime and MOIS have been reported by Iran's state-controlled media. In a letter published on 16 March 2005, the Iranian regime's daily 'Kayhan' revealed the contacts between Nicholson and the head of MOIS, Ali Younessi. It stated, "Given her role in the British Parliament and the European Union, Baroness Nicholson has initiated special action in recent years to collect credible and irrefutable documents and evidence to have the name of the terrorist grouplet, the hypocrites, in the list of terrorist and anti-human groups. The MOIS has used this opportunity and has raised some issues with her in a meeting." In the course of the adoption of a recent resolution in the European Parliament against the vile human rights abuses of the Iranian regime, she claimed that Iran was the most democratic country in the Middle East region and that women have the most rights in Iran compared with the rest of the region. Her remarks drew outrage among Euro MPs. The state-controlled daily 'Abrar' also wrote on 1 March 2003, "Nicholson said in 1999 and 2000 [the PMOI] transferred some of Saddam's weapons of mass destruction and buried them beneath the southern marshes". Of course this allegation, like many others levelled by Nicholson against the PMOI, have in the fullness of time proved to have been completely untrue. Another example of her involvement in MOIS' misinformation campaign against the PMOI related to the murder of three Christian leaders in Iran in 1994, which was initially blamed on the PMOI, but later transpired to have been the work of the second in command at MOIS. On 21 June 1995, the Iranian daily 'Iran' wrote, "An anti-Iran meeting in the British House of Commons was exposed after the Secretary of the Parliamentary Human Rights Group revealed the Mojahedin's conspiracy in murdering three Christian priests. Emma Nicholson, MP, from the Conservative Party referred to her meeting with the murderers of the priests in Iran and said after her meeting, it became clear to her that the Mojahedin are responsible for these murders…Ms Nicholson told MPs that she has "met with two women who had been arrested and confessed." She said in her meeting with the two women no one else was present and that they confessed to having committed this crime on the orders of Rajavi's group." On 9 February 1996, the UN Special Rapporteur on Religious Tolerance stated, "The Iranian government had apparently decided to execute those Protestant leaders in order not only to bring the Mojahedin organisation into disrepute abroad by declaring it responsible for those crimes, but also, at the domestic level, partly to decapitate the Protestant community and force it to discontinue the conversion of Muslims…" The Daily Telegraph also wrote on 5 March 2004 that Nicholson having set up a charity in the name of Ammar, who was a young Iraqi war victim, had in fact then abandoned the boy who was by then 23 years old. Another participant in this press conference is Alain Chevalerais. In many trips to Iran, he has been accused of being the guest of the MOIS and his expenses having been paid by a MOIS front Labour outfit called the "House of Labour." Ali Rabi'e, former MOIS deputy and the secretary of the Supreme National Security Council under Mohammad Khatami, founded the House of Labour. The other participant is a Dutch woman named Judith Neurink. Her interview with a Farsi language radio on 7 November 2005, unveils her motives for taking part in this demonization campaign against the PMOI. She said, "contrary to what the U.S. is saying, the Mojahedin is not the de facto alternative for the current regime. Our main conclusion is that beware, this organisation is dangerous." The Committee of Anglo-Iranian Lawyers draws the attention of the public in Britain and relevant officials, particularly the British security services to the activities of MOIS and its foreign operatives in London. It underscores that European soil must not be turned into the roaming ground for Iranian and non-Iranian MOIS agents. This is an issue of immense concern for Iranian dissidents, especially bearing in mind the Iranian regime's record of assassination of Iranian dissidents in the heart of Europe. In this regard, the Committee points to the book published in 1996 by the Parliamentary Human Rights Group entitled 'Iran: State of Terror', which underscored, "Another method is using the small number of defectors who had at one stage co-operated with opposition organizations and individuals. These persons, due to their low or non-existent motivation to continue the struggle and maintain their principles, allowed themselves to be bought by the regime at a later stage. Such people have so far provided regime's terrorist in Europe with the most extensive intelligence and political services. In addition to providing information on the assassination targets to the regime, they prepare the political grounds for the murders of dissidents by spreading propaganda against the individuals or organizations they had previously co-operated with, defaming them and accusing them of being worse than the ruling regime."
Excerpt from Mojahedin (Rajavi cult) website ncr-iran.org Front associations for disseminating false propaganda against the Resistance Forming cultural associations to disseminate false propaganda against the Iranian Resistance is another MOIS tactic. These associations are purported not to be in contact with the regime and in fact even criticize it. One such association is Damavand Cultural Association, which uses a Canadian address...
Excerpt from Mojahedin (Rajavi cult) website ncr-iran.org
Iran:Tehran's Intelligence Ministry repeats its stale, transparent tactic against Iranian opposition
Excerpt from Mojahedin (Rajavi cult) website ncr-iran.org
NCRI, November 10 - The following is a Statement by Win Griffiths, former Labour MP for Bridgend, issued on November 9, 2005 on the agents of the Iranian regime in Britain: related links: http://www.iran-interlink.org/files/info/Jafarzadeh%20bio.htm http://www.iran-interlink.org/index.php?mod=view&id=821 For up to date information, news as articles visit |


"Iran-Interlink" identifies itself as:
Khodabandeh was with the Mojahedin until 1996 when he decided to quit the struggle of his own free will and associated with supporters for a brief period after that. Both had disassociated themselves from the organisation quite freely after finding that a life of struggle against the mullahs in Tehran was too difficult. The two married sometime after that. Little was it known that the Iranian MOIS would make an offer that they couldn't refuse.
"Dissident" exposed as
In 1994, Haghi was recruited by the MOIS and from 1995 he was in regular contact with Maqsoudi, an MOIS handler working under diplomatic cover in the Iranian consulate in the Netherlands. It was then that three years after leaving Iraq, Haghi suddenly ‘remembered’ that he was imprisoned and tortured by the Mojahedin during the years he had been in Iraq.
The Baroness has for more than twelve years cooperated with Iranian authorities and received direct and indirect funding and support from the Iranian government for her efforts to supposedly provide humanitarian aide to refugees from Iraq who fled to Iran during the Iran-Iraq war. However, it seems that the refugees mostly formed Iranian funded groups such as Hakim's force, who took refuge in Iran and were trained and funded by Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps and the Iranian regime's extra-territorial Qods Force, believed responsible for coordinating parts of the insurgency in Iraq today. There is a serious conflict of interest, therefore, in her claims against Iranian opposition forces who seek to change the regime in Iran.
As an MEP she has actively lobbied for Iranian interests with European governments and political parties. The Baroness played an instrumental role in brokering the inclusion of the PMOI in the EU terror list as part of a bargain with Tehran. In a meeting in Brussels on 19 March 2002, held on the initiative of the clerical regime and attended by then Tehran's deputy foreign minister, Emma Nicholson said that she would ask the EU to declare the PMOI as a terrorist group.
Dowlat Nowrouzi, who represents the National Council of Resistance of Iran in Britain, told Iran Focus that over the past several years the MOIS had developed several “cells” in Britain whose main targets were Iranian opposition activists.