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Mojahed (newspaper)

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Persian-English political publication (1979–1981) For the Algerian newspaper with the same name, see El Moudjahid.
Mojahed
Mujahed (newspaper) - year 1980
TypeWeekly
FormatTabloid
Launched23 July 1979 (1979-07-23)
Political alignmentPeople's Mujahedin of Iran
Language
  • Persian
  • English
Ceased publication30 June 1981 (1981-06-30)
Relaunched2 December 1982; 42 years ago (1982-12-02)
CountryIran
Sister newspapers
  • Iran Liberation
  • Iran Zamin (1995–98)
OCLC number52053082
Free online archives Mojahed (Persian: مجاهد, romanizedMujāhid, lit.'The warrior') is the official newspaper of the People's Mujahedin of Iran (MEK), first printed in 1979 on a weekly basis. The newspaper published its last issue inside Iran on 30 June 1981 and after a hiatus resumed publication in exile on 2 December 1982.

Mojahed (Persian: مجاهد, romanizedMujāhid, lit.'The warrior') is the official newspaper of the People's Mujahedin of Iran (MEK), first printed in 1979 on a weekly basis. The newspaper published its last issue inside Iran on 30 June 1981 and after a hiatus resumed publication in exile on 2 December 1982.

History

Mojahed staff spent months to prepare for launching it, before it was first published in late July 1979. The paper was used to publicize the MEK's political campaigns and programs. While trying to suppress the MEK, the Iranian regime banned the Mojahed on 2 November 1980 on orders of the Chief Prosecutor who said the paper was "spreading slanderous lies". However, it continued to print via clandestine printing press and was distributed underground. According to Dilip Hiro, the newspaper sold about 30,000 copies by mid-1981. Ervand Abrahamian said that Mojahed's circulation had surpassed Jomhouri-e Eslami of the Islamic Republican Party and reached 500,000 around the same time.

After exile, the MEK established printing presses both in Europe and North America and in December 1982, the newspaper reappeared. In 1983, Mojahed became available throughout an international network in several capitals and in some issues contained over seventy newsprint pages. Members of the MEK were encouraged to read the publication in their spare time. As of 2000, the newspaper continued publication for the MEK's cadre.

In June 2003, French police raided the MEK in France and also banned publications of the Mojahed. Group members denied any wrongdoing and accused French intelligence of working with the Iranian government to tarnish the group.

Content

Ervand Abrahamian said that the MEK used the Mojahed paper to move "the issue of democracy to centre stage" and to accuse the Iranian regime, which it described as a "dictatorship of mullahs", of "betraying the Islamic Revolution".

Anthony Hyman identified the newspaper as being "devoted to the personality cult of Masud Rajavi, the leader of this authoritarian party".

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Abrahamian 1987, p. 248
  2. Buchta 2000, p. 115
  3. Abrahamian 1987, p. 175
  4. Abrahamian 1987, p. 194, 206
  5. Abrahamian 1987, p. 212
  6. Hiro 2013, p. 189
  7. Abrahamian 1987, p. 207
  8. Abrahamian 1987, p. 244
  9. Abrahamian 1987, p. 250
  10. Buchta 2000, p. 104
  11. Howard 2004, p. 200
  12. "New warships to join Iranian Navy's southern fleet". Reuters. 17 September 2014.
  13. Abrahamian 1987, p. 209
  14. Hyman 1990, p. 26

Sources

  • Abrahamian, Ervand (1987), Radical Islam: The Iranian Mojahedin, I.B. Tauris, Yale University Press, ISBN 9781850430773
  • Hyman, Anthony (1990), "Iran's press — freedom within limits", Index on Censorship, 19 (2): 26, doi:10.1080/03064229008534794, S2CID 143865652
  • Hiro, Dilip (2013), Iran Under the Ayatollahs (Routledge Revivals), Routledge, ISBN 978-1135043810
  • Howard, Roger (2004), Iran in Crisis?: Nuclear Ambitions and the American Response, Zed Books, ISBN 9781848137110
  • Buchta, Wilfried (2000), "The Militant Iranian Opposition in Iran and Exile", Who Rules Iran?: The Structure of Power in the Islamic Republic, The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, The Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, ISBN 9780944029398
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