Introduction
Raids conducted by the
Australian Federal Police (AFP) in June 2003 on the homes of Iranian
Australians reportedly suspected of involvement with the Iranian opposition
group, the MeK, have raised questions about the justification for such
action, particularly as the MeK is not a proscribed organisation in
Australia.
The MeK is the largest
of the Iranian opposition groups, and is sometimes referred to as the
Mujahideen-e-Khalq Organisation (MKO), or The People's Mujahideen Organisation
of Iran (PMOI). The group also maintains a military wing in Iraq, known
as the National Liberation Army (NLA).
Background(1)
The MeK was formed in
the mid-1960s as a splinter group of the Liberation Movement of Iran.
The MeK's philosophy mixes Marxist and Islamic principles, and its primary
objective is to overthrow and replace the Iranian Government with its
own secularist administration.
In the early 1970s, the
MeK fought an armed struggle against the Shah, whose Government the
MeK viewed as a puppet regime of the US.
During the 1970s, the
MeK was accused of conducting several assassinations of US military
personnel and civilians working in Iran,
and of actively supporting the takeover of the US Embassy in Tehran
in 1979. That same year, the MeK helped to overthrow the Shah and install
the new Shiite regime led by the Ayatollah Khomeini.
Ironically, despite popular
support, the MeK came under increasing attack for its secularist ideology,
from the very regime it helped install.
After being driven out
of Iran, the MeK resettled in Paris. Having supported Iraq during the
IranIraq War, the MeK moved most of its operations there in 1987, whereupon
the NLA was formed.
At the end of the Gulf
War in 1991, the MeK was alleged to have assisted the Iraqi Republican
Guard in suppressing Shiite and Kurdish uprisings, although this has
always been denied by the MeK.
The US
designated the MeK as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation (FTO) in 1997,
on the basis that it kills civilians. Although civilians have died as
a result of MeK operations, the mass indiscriminate killing associated
with some terrorist groups does not appear to have ever been the MeK's
objective or favoured tactic.
The MeK has now lost three
appeals (1999, 2001 and 2003) to the US Government to be removed from
the list of FTOs, and its terrorist status was reaffirmed each time.
The MeK has continued to protest worldwide against its listing(2),
with the overt support of some US
political figures.(3)
In the lead-up to the
2003 war in Iraq, it was suggested the MeK's camps in Iraq were likely
hiding places for components of the Iraqi illegal weapons programmes(4)
and that the MeK/NLA might be used to defend Iraqi cities against a
US-led attack.(5)
Following initial US bombing
of MeK bases in Iraq, the US apparently negotiated with the MeK forces
to stop bombing MeK bases provided the MeK did not attack US troops.(6)
Apart from the obvious short-term benefit of securing protection from
an armed rebel group allied with the Iraqi regime, the long-term objective
of the US Government is believed to have been an attempt to preserve
the only major armed opposition to the Iranian regime.(7)
Activities and Tactics
The MeK's attacks have
largely been conducted within Iran
against the Iranian Government. Most of its activities overseas, including
Australia, are limited to political demonstrations, publicity campaigns
and fundraising, rather than acts of terrorism.(8)
The notable exception
is the simultaneous attacks conducted by the MeK in April 1992 on Iranian
embassies in eleven countries, in retaliation for the bombing of MeK
bases in Iraq by the Iranian
Air Force just days earlier. The Iranian Embassy in Canberra was over-run
and some staff were seriously injured.
The attacks abruptly highlighted
the MeK's ability to coordinate a global campaign of violence in a short
space of time, and once again thrust the MeK onto the world stage. The
sudden violence of the 1992 attacks may have dented the MeK's image
as 'freedom fighters', and possibly convinced people that the MeK was
indeed a terrorist organisation.
Indeed, such activities
clearly fall within the definition of 'politically motivated violence'
as used by ASIO, and would now also constitute a terrorist act under
the Criminal Code Act 1995.(9)
Germany's
Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) has noted that the
MeK's publicity campaigns often include attempts to contact members
of parliament (MPs) to inform them of the MeK's goals, encourage political
support, and influence parliamentary debate about Iran.(10)
Similar petitioning of Australian MPs has also been known to occur.
Whilst the MeK is not
considered capable of overthrowing the Iranian Government on its own,
and is believed to have lost much of its popular support within Iran
since siding with Iraq,(11)
it has continued to demonstrate its ability to conduct assassinations,
sabotage and other attacks in Iran.
As such, the MeK remains a serious threat to Iranian officials, the
group's main targets.
Membership and Leadership
The MeK claims to have
a 30 000 50 000 strong armed guerrilla force, based in Iraq,
but a membership of between 15 000 20 000 is considered
more likely.(12) MeK supporters exist worldwide.
The principal leader of
the MeK, and President-in-exile, is a woman called Maryam
Rajavi (whose official website is located at http://www.iran-e-azad.org/english/president.html).
Another woman, Moshgan Parsaii,
is Secretary-General of the organisation. Maryam's husband, Massoud,
is said to be in charge of the military wing, a third of which are believed
to be women.(13)
Political Representation
The MeK is the dominant
member of the political coalition of Iranian opposition groups known
as the National Council of Resistance of Iran(14) (NCRI),
which considers itself to be a Government-in-exile, and is also led
by Massoud Rajavi.
Formed in 1981, the NCRI
has offices in Europe and Washington, where it enjoys
limited US political support.(15)
The NCRI's vision for Iran
is a secularist Government which supports gender equality, political
pluralism and the separation of church and State.(16)
It is currently illegal
in Australia to fund or resource
the NCRI.
Funding and Support
The MeK claims to be supported
from both within Iran and overseas.
Massoud Rajavi claimed
in a 1994 interview that donations that year alone had amounted to US$45
million.(17)
The MeK is also known
to operate behind Iranian expatriate or refugee organisations to collect
funds for the MeK. Seven Iranians were arrested in 2001 in the US after
US$400 000 was found to have been transferred to a MeK front organisation
in the United Arab Emirates, which the FBI claims was ultimately used
to buy weapons.(18)
Current Status of the MeK
The MeK is a banned terrorist
organisation in both the UK
and the US. The European Union
listed the MeK as a terrorist group in May 2002.
The MeK is currently not
listed as a terrorist organisation in Australia or Canada. The MeK is
also not on the UN's list of terrorist organisations, additions to which
must have a demonstrated link with the Taliban and/or al-Qaeda in order
to qualify.
However, the MeK does
appear on Australia's list of entities, the assets of which must be
frozen. This means that since late 2001 it has been a criminal offence
in Australia under the provisions
of the Charter of the United Nations Act 1945 and the
Charter of the United Nations (Terrorism and Dealings with Assets) Regulations
2002, to fund or resource the group. Together, this legislation ratifies
Australia's obligation under UN Security Council Resolution 1373 to
suppress the financing of terrorism.
The exact reasons for
the recent AFP raids on MeK supporters have not been disclosed. Perhaps
the fact that reports did not mention any involvement by ASIO in the
raids, suggests the matter is of a criminal, rather than security-related
nature.
As funding the MeK is
illegal, the raids were presumably conducted on this basis, particularly
as those raided said the police asked if they had sent money overseas.(19)
It has been suggested,
however, that the sudden move against the MeK has more to do with a
recently signed Memorandum of Understanding with Iran and a visit to
Australia by an Iranian delegation in the weeks preceding the raids,
than actually investigating possible terrorism. However, the Government
has denied the raids were politically motivated.(20)
It is possible the Government
is preparing to ban the MeK in Australia
under the new Criminal Code Amendment (Terrorist Organisations) Bill
2003, which, if passed, will enable Australia
to proscribe groups such as the MeK in the absence of any UN listing.
Despite the MeK's violent
track record, it does not appear to pose a present or prospective threat
to Australia, and it might
therefore be difficult to obtain bipartisan support for its categorisation
in Australia as a
terrorist organisation.