UPDATE: Iraq Announces Camp Ashraf Will Close in Two Months

BAGHDAD, Iraq– On December 21, 2008 the Iraq government announced plans to close Camp Ashraf within two months.  The Iraqi government assumed responsibility for the security of the camp from U.S. forces earlier this year.  On January 21, 2009, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki announced the government will expel all members of PMOI from the country.

For more than 20 years, members of the exiled organization People’s Mujahideen of Iran (PMOI), also known as Mojahedin Khalq (MEK) have lived in the camp, located north of Baghdad.  The camp was first opened in 1986, when members of the group fled Iran and were permitted to establish a base north of Baghdad to launch raids against Iran in support of Iraqi war efforts during the Iran-Iraq War.  The organization was also used by Saddam Hussein to suppress Shiite and Kurdish opposition in Iraq following the first Persian Gulf War.  Although PMOI claims it has renounced violence since 2001, Iraq, the United States and the European Union continue to classify PMOI as a terrorist organization.  Iraq has also accused the organization of planning suicide attacks targeting Iraqi security forces, which the organization has denied, calling the allegation a “sheer lie” on the part of the Iraqi government.

According to Iraqi National Security Adviser, Muwaffeq al-Rubaie, “over 3,000 inhabitants of Camp Ashraf have to leave Iraq and the camp will be part of history within two months.”  The Iraqi government has announced plans to close the camp on more than one occasion since the fall of Saddam Hussein;s Baathist government in 2003.  However, according to al-Rubaie, the recent decision to close the camp and the two month time table are “irreversible.”  Iraq maintains it will not allow terrorist groups to operate on Iraqi soil.

While the Iraqi government has stated that the inhabitants of the camp will not be expelled from Iraq by force, the government has not indicated where they will be permitted to reside after the two month deadline expires.  The government has stated that members of the PMOI will either be returned to Iran, at their own request, or to another country where they currently hold a passport of residence.  According to al-Rubai, currently 914 PMOI members do have passports of residency for a third country.

Amnesty International has urged the Iraqi government to classify members of PMOI as “protected persons” under the Fourth Geneva Convention, Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War.  Classifying members of the organization in this manner will preclude the Iraqi government from extraditing or forcibly returning people to their countries of origin where they may be subject to torture, cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or execution.

For more information, please see:

Gulf Daily News – Iraq Terror Clamp – 24 January 2009

Tehran Times – Iraq to Close MKO Camp in Two Months – 24 January 2009

Hartford Courant – Iraqi ACcuses Iranian Opposition Group of Planning Suicide Attack; Exiles Deny Allegation – 23 January 2009

Reuters – Iraq Says Will Shut Iran Rebel Camp in 2 Months – 23 January 2009

Author: Impunity Watch Archive