Iranian exiles living in Camp Ashraf agree to
move, ending standoff with Iraq government
By Associated Press,
Published: December 28
BAGHDAD — The head of an Iranian exile group holed up at
a camp in Iraq said Wednesday that the first of the camp’s
residents are ready to move to a new location picked by the
Iraqi government, solving a potential crisis.
The announcement Wednesday by Maryam Rajavi, the
Paris-based leader of the group, averted what could have
been a bloody showdown with Iraqi authorities if the
residents had refused to move.
“After receiving assurances ... and as a sign of goodwill, 400 Ashraf
residents are ready to go to Camp Liberty with their moveable property
and vehicles at first opportunity,” read the statement. Camp Liberty is
the former American military base in Baghdad that has been chosen as the
group’s new home.
The agreement comes as militants this week twice tried to target the
camp with rockets. No one was injured.
The Iraqi government vowed to close Camp Ashraf, home to about 3,400
Iranian exiles, by the end of this year. The exiles, members of the
People’s Mujahedeen Organization of Iran, one-time allies of Saddam
Hussein in a common fight against Iran, favor the overthrow of the
Iranian government.
But since the ouster of Saddam they have become an irritant to an
Iraqi government that is trying to establish good ties with Iran and
sees the group as an affront to Iraqi sovereignty. At least 34 people
were killed in April during an Iraqi government raid on the camp.
The United Nations on Sunday announced an agreement to move the
residents of Camp Ashraf to a temporary location, but until Wednesday,
the exiles had not said whether they would go.
Rajavi said 400 residents are ready to move first as a sign of
goodwill. The statement made no mention of when the other residents
would go, but the group’s residents are believed to want to stay
together. If the first move is successful and safe, it’s likely the rest
would be relocated soon.
“The transfer of the first group of residents is a test of the Iraqi
Government’s attitude in respecting obligations as professed to the U.N.
and U.S.,” Rajavi said.
At Camp Liberty, the U.N.’s refugee agency will interview the
residents to determine their eligibility for refugee status, before they
can eventually be resettled in third countries. Returning to Iran is
ruled out because of their opposition to the regime.
Rajavi’s statement also gave rare insight into a camp that was built
during the 1980s and has largely been closed off to the outside world.
The group’s residents have not left the camp for years, and the little
contact they have with outsiders is through the Iraqi military, visiting
diplomats and aid agencies. They do have extensive communications
equipment that allows them to communicate with the outside world.
The group’s leader said residents had taken a piece of land in the
desert and transformed it into a “modern city with their labor and
extensive cost.”
“It has a university, library, museum, hospital, power station,
cemetery, mosque, parks, lake, sports and recreation facilities, and
underground bomb shelters,” she said.
The group carried out a series of bombings and assassinations against
Iran’s clerical regime in the 1980s and fought alongside Saddam’s forces
in the Iran-Iraq war. The group says it renounced violence in 2001. U.S.
soldiers disarmed them during the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Under the agreement outlined by the U.N., the international
organization will monitor the relocation process, and then a team from
the U.N.’s refugee agency will be deployed at the new location to
process the refugee claims. The U.S. has said that its embassy personnel
will also frequently check on the camp’s residents.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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