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Massoud Rajavi

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Massoud Rajavi (Persian: مسعود رجوی) is the president of National Council of Resistance of Iran and the leader of People's Mujahedin of Iran (PMOI, also known as the MEK), the main opposition group to the Iranian regime After leaving Iran in 1981, he resided in France and Iraq. Since the 2003 invasion of Iraq he has not made any public appearances and is presumed to be in hiding.However he has been sending several messages to the Iranian people, the last one on the occasion of the Iranian new year in March 2008

File:Rajavi1994.png
Massoud Rajavi, Leader of Iranian Resistance

Biography

Massoud Rajavi is a graduate of political law from Tehran University. His brothers completed their higher education in France, Switzerland, Britain and Belgium. He joined the PMOI when he was 19 and a law student at Tehran University. Later on he was arrested by SAVAK (the Shah's secret police) and was sentenced to death. Due to efforts by his brother Prof. Kazem Rajavi, he was not executed and remained in prison until released by the people during the revolution in 1979. In addition to his brother’s efforts, Amnesty International, the International Committee of the Red Cross, as well as distinguished European personalities such as François Mitterrand, intervened to save his life. Prof. Kazem Rajavi was assassinated in Aril 1990 in Geneva. Massoud Rajavi was released from prison three weeks before the revolution in February 1979. Rajavi and the MEK actively opposed the Shah of Iran and participated in the 1979 Iranian Revolution However, the group's ideology, which was quite different from the Ayatollahs’ interpretation of Islam, clashed with Ayatollah Khomeini's government. In 1980 he was one of the candidates for Iran's presidential elections; however before the final result of the election was announced, Ayatollah Khomeini ordered to omit Rajavi's name from the list of candidates. In a speech in June 1980 at Tehran’s Amjadieh Stadium, Mr. Rajavi criticized the regime’s leaders, especially Ayattollah Khoimeini, about the suppression of liberties. In 1981, when Ayatollah Khomeini dismissed President Bani Sadr and a new wave of arrests and executions started in the country, Rajavi and Bani Sadr flew to Paris by a jet from Tehran's airbase. Rajavi and the MEK first moved to France, and in 1986 moved to Iraq and set up a base on the Iranian border. The US State Department as well as the European Union classify the MEK and its related entities as as terrorist organizations. Although the European Court of Justice has overturned this designation in December 2006, the Council of the EU declared on 30 January 2007 that it would maintain the organization on the blacklist. (See: Designation as a terrorist organization)

On Nov 30, 2007 the British Court,The Proscribed Organisations Appeal Commission(POAC) ruled to the annulment of the terrorist designation and ordered the British government to remove PMOI off the terrorist list On Jan. 23, 2008, the European Council's Parliamentary Assembly, meeting in Strasbourg, backed a report by Swiss Liberal Senator Dick Marty ( Paragraphs 54 to 58) which insisted on the removal of PMOI from black lists. attacking the methods used by the UN Security Council and the EU to blacklist individuals and groups suspected of having terrorist connections abuse basic rights and are "completely arbitrary". This issue covers the case of the PMOI too. A week later on 31 January 2008, the European Parliament adopted a resolution on Iran which took notes of these two verdicts in EU and UK courts. On 7 May 2008, the UK Court of Appeal rejected an appeal by Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, against a decision by the Proscribed Organisations Appeal Commission to remove the PMOI from the list of groups banned under the Terrorism Act 2000. Lord Phillips, the Lord Chief Justice, said there was no evidence that the People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran was currently involved in terrorism.

Following the American invasion of Iraq, Massoud Rajavi disappeared and is presumed to be in hiding. In his absence, his wife Maryam Rajavi has assumed his responsibilities as leader of the MEK. As of 2005, over 300 members of the group had returned to Iran voluntarily and claimed asylum.

Video of Rajavi's meeting with Saddam Hussein

File:Massoud Rajavi.jpg
Video still.

A tape of an official meeting of Saddam Hussein with Massoud Rajavi which was first shown by PMOI TV in June 1986.

References

  1. Council on Foreign Relations, "Backgrounder: Mujahadeen-e-Khalq (Iranian Rebels)."
  2. "Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs)". US Department of State. 2005. Retrieved 2006-09-22.
  3. "COUNCIL COMMON POSITION 2005/847/CFSP" (PDF). Official Journal of the European Union. L 314: 44. 2005.
  4. Terrorisme: la justice européenne appelle l'UE à justifier sa liste noire, Radio France International, December 12, 2006 Template:Fr icon
  5. EU’s Ministers of Economic and Financial Affairs’ Council violates the verdict by the European Court, NCRI website, February 1, 2007.
  6. European Council is not above the law, NCRI website, February 2, 2007
  7. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/12/02/nbook102.xml
  8. Angela Woodall (2005). "Group on U.S. terror list lobbies hard". United Press International. Retrieved 2007-07-19.

External links

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