Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Iranian-Americans 2006 Democracy Convention in DC

On May 25, 2006, Iranain-American held their second convention for a democractic, secular republic in Iran and in support of democractic change there. Below are some media reports on this event.

The Washington Times, May 25, 2006
As a teenager, she spent 2½ years in an Iranian prison, fearing for her life and watching other dissidents dragged away for execution. Today, Shirin Nariman is a naturalized American citizen, a mother of two daughters and a U.S. resident for 27 years. She has no plans to return to Iran, but she is still trying to help overthrow the brutal, theocratic regime that she thinks is bent on world domination through the export of Islamic extremism.

"The regime wants to kill all hope," she said during a visit to The Washington Times yesterday to promote a gathering of Iranian-Americans and Iranian exiles today in Washington. "One thing I learned in prison is you never lose hope." Mrs. Nariman said she is keeping her promise to her fellow prisoners, the ones who did not survive their captivity. "I had friends being led to their execution, and they would say, 'Remember, never give up,' " she said.

Mrs. Nariman, who was accompanied by a colleague, Majid Sadeghpour, hope administration officials and members of Congress will listen to the messages that will be delivered today at the second annual National Convention for a Democratic, Secular Republic in Iran.

Mr. Sadeghpour, whose brother was killed and sister tortured in Iran, said diplomatic efforts to negotiate with the regime are futile. "The appeasement of the mullahs is responsible for the empowerment of the Iranian regime and its projection of power around the globe," said Mr. Sadeghpour, also a naturalized American.

They said the only way the Iranian government will abandon its nuclear program is through tough international sanctions on its oil exports and the isolation of Iranian diplomats.

"They have an expansionist, fascist ideology. They will not stop," Mr. Sadeghpour said. He said the extremist religious leaders who control the government are incapable of moderation. "A violent black panther will not give birth to a peaceful, white dove," he said. "You cannot ask them to be something they are not." Mrs. Nariman added that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is like "Hitler with a fundamentalist ideology." Mr. Ahmadinejad has embraced an apocalyptic version of Islam and has threatened to destroy Israel.

Speakers at today's convention are expected to renew calls for the United States to remove the National Council of Resistance of Iran and its military wing, the People's Mojahedin, from the State Department's list of terrorist organizations. "Delist them and you will give hope to the Iranian people," Mrs. Nariman said, adding that the regime is widely unpopular among the population and citing 4,000 strikes and protests throughout the country last year.

The Mojahedin, who were based in Iraq under Saddam Hussein, surrendered to U.S. forces in 2003 and remain under "protective custody" at Camp Ashraf, about an hour north of Baghdad. At last year's convention, two U.S. Army officers who dealt directly with the Mojahedin said they deserve to have the terrorist designation lifted. Lt. Col. Thomas Cantwell, who commanded Camp Ashraf, denied they were terrorists, and Capt. Vivian Gembara, the military lawyer who negotiated their surrender, said the United States lost an opportunity to use the rebel army to its advantage... The convention, which is open to the public, begins at 1 p.m. at the Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium, 1301 Constitution Ave. NW.

The Chicago Tribune, May 25, 2006
While controversy swirls around Iran’s ambitions for a civilian nuclear power program - which European and American leaders view as ambition for a bomb - a collection of Iranian-Americans from around the United States will assemble today with a call for “regime change’’ in Iran.

The [Convention], welcoming several members of Congress and an expected 500 delegates from around the U.S. to its second annual convention, maintains that the ascent of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, with his hatred for Israel, friendships with Syria and Hamas and designs for a nuclear program, has made the case for a peaceful overhaul of Iran as a secular, democratic state more pressing. “The only way is a democratic regime change by the Iranian people,’’ says Shirin Nariman, spokeswoman for the council. “We don’t want anyone to come in and do it.’’

There was a certain amount of interest in the first National Convention for a Democratic, Secular Republic in Iran – which drew several members of Congress – last year. But the council expects greater interest this afternoon for its parley at the Andrew Mellon Auditorium on Constitution Avenue in Washington, in light of Iran’s insistence on pursuing nuclear power over the objections of European and U.S. leaders...

As pressure mounts on the United Nations Security Council to intervene, Iranian-American critics are counting on another sort of pressure building within Iran itself – pressure for a peaceful regime change. “The threat of the hard-liners is becoming more tangible and visible to the world,’’ the U.S. Iranian council spokeswoman says. “Iran is going to keep playing and playing until they have the capacity to have the bomb.’’

The Wall Street Journal, November 29, 2006
Early this summer, as Washington fretted about Iran's nuclear program, supporters of Mujahedin-e Khalq, an Iranian opposition group, held a rally in an auditorium two blocks from the White House. Prominent members of Congress addressed the crowd, as did the State Department's recently retired ambassador-at-large for war crimes.

Maryam Rajavi, the dissident outfit's leader, beamed in a stirring speech via satellite from France. Denouncing Iran's clerical rulers and their nuclear ambitions, she proclaimed democracy "the answer to Islamic fundamentalism."

Mujahedin-e Khalq, known as MEK, is Iran's largest exile opposition group and, say its supporters, the best hope of bringing democracy to Iran. It reaches into Iran through its own satellite TV channel and claims an underground network of activists inside the Islamic republic. It also has a big presence in neighboring Iraq, where U.S. soldiers watch over more than 3,000 MEK members gathered in a sprawling camp north of Baghdad...

Iranians Hold Convention for Democracy in Iran

Agence Grance Presse
April 14, 2005

WASHINGTON, April 14 - Hundreds of Iranian exiles linked to an opposition group Washington considers terrorist gathered Thursday to demand US President George W. Bush support them in their efforts to unseat the Islamic regime in Tehran.

The National Convention for a Democratic Secular Republic in Iran gathered Iranian-Americans to push for official US support for their efforts.

Iranian opposition leader Maryam Rajavi, addressing the convention in a video link from France, called on the United States and the European Union to end its appeasement of the Tehran regime and recognize her National Council of Resistance of Iran as an Iranian government-in-exile.

"Just as the time has come to abandon the appeasement of tyrants, so the time has come to remove the ominous legacy of that policy, namely the terror label against the Iranian resistance," Rajavi said, according to a printed translation of her remarks in Farsi.

Rajavi, president of the opposition group, cannot enter the United States because the council and its armed wing, the People's Mujahedeen, are considered terrorist organizations by the US government and the European Union.

Its detractors call the organization a Marxist cult, but the group insists it is committed to democracy and is merely fighting oppression under the Islamic regime in Tehran.

The group has considerable support among US lawmakers, think-tank experts and lobbyists, who claim the terrorism designation was meant to appease Tehran and want Bush to order it lifted.

Several lawmakers emphasized their support for the group with appearances at the convention, including Representative Tom Tancredo, a Colorado Republican, who called Rajavi "an extraordinary individual," and said the Iranian people "can't have any better spokespeople than all of you here."

Bush has denounced the regime in Tehran, saying it supports terrorism and is trying to develop a nuclear bomb, and has urged Iranians to work against the ruling clergy. In February, during his State of the Union address to Congress, Bush said: "To the Iranian people, I say tonight: As you stand for your own liberty, America stands with you."

Tancredo and other lawmakers however want the United States to go further. They have introduced legislation to provide financial and political assistance to Iranian opposition groups that oppose terrorism and support democracy.

The People's Mujahedeen, whose headquarters are in Auvers-sur-Oise outside Paris, was implicated in attacks on US military officers in Iran in the 1970s, and supported the 1979 Islamic revolution and the subsequent takeover of the US embassy by Iranian militants.

But the movement was suppressed in the years that followed, and the group set up base in Iraq in 1986 and carried out regular cross-border raids into Iran, with which Iraq fought a bloody war between 1980 and 1988.
Some 3,800 of the group's fighters were disarmed and interned by US forces in 2003 at a camp in Iraq. They have been given protected status under the Geneva Conventions, and US officials have interviewed them to determine if they had been involved in terrorist incidents.

Monday, May 21, 2007

30,000 IRANIANS RALLY IN PARIS IN SUPPORT OF DEMOCRACY


On Saturday, July 1, some 30,000 supporters of the People’s Mojahedin (PMOI) and the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) took part in the largest-ever gathering of Iranians outside Iran.

The participants declared support for Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, the Iranian Resistance’s President-elect and the third option, namely democratic change through support for the Iranian people and Resistance. They also stated their opposition to the mullahs’ regime obtaining nuclear weapons, a military invasion of Iran and the continuing policy of appeasement vis-à-vis the mullahs.
In this elaborate gathering, held in Le Bourget Exhibition Hail near Paris, a number of European parliamentarians and personalities spoke in support of the Iranian Resistance. Former French Prime Minister Mrs. Edith Cresson, former Algerian Prime Minister Sid Ahmad Ghozali, former judge at the European Court of Justice Rt. Hon. Lord Slynn of Hadley, former President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe Lord Russell-Johnston, and parliamentary delegations from Britain, Germany, Italy, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, The European Parliament, Canada, Australia were among the speakers.

Rally in France For Exiled Foe Of Iran's Rulers

The New York Times
July 2, 2007
By CRAIG S. SMITH

LE BOURGET, France, July 1 - Thousands of Iranians from across Europe gathered here today in support of the National Council of Resistance of Iran and its leader, Maryam Rajavi, who was recently freed from French judicial restrictions that limited her movement.

Ms. Rajavi's message to the assembled crowd of 10,000 or more was that Iran needed neither nuclear weapons nor nuclear power but secular democracy, presumably led by Ms. Rajavi herself -- or her husband, Massoud Rajavi, who is now presumed to be in hiding in Iraq.

But the meeting's deeper message was that the Rajavi organization is still alive and biding its time.

The National Council, which Ms. Rajavi heads, has been declared a terrorist organization by the United States because of the violent tactics of its military arm. Washington and and the European Union have made the same declaration about the council's dominant military arm, the Mujahedeen Khalq, or People's Holy Warriors.

Its militia in Iraq has been disarmed and confined to a camp north of Baghdad since May 2003. Ms. Rajavi's freedom to travel was restricted after a raid that July on the group's headquarters near Paris.

The organization has been lobbying to have the terrorist label removed and to be taken seriously as a viable opposition movement to topple the theocracy in Iran.

Despite those problems, Ms. Rajavi has built a loyal following among middle-class Iranians immigrants across Europe, primarily through an online network of Iranian women.

More women than men support Ms. Rajavi ''because of the misogynist character of the Iranian regime,'' one woman said.

Most of the women were dressed in typical European summer fashions, in contrast to Ms. Rajavi's signature headscarf and matching suit, bright green on this occasion.

They arrived for the weekend-long event by bus from as far north as Norway and as far south as Italy. Many people came free or for nominal sums, their travel subsidized by local donations. ''They are the only organization that can bring freedom to Iran,'' said Sofie Soroori, 38, who came to the rally from Sweden.

She dismissed talk of the organization's dark side, blaming the mullahs in Iran for misinformation.