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KurdistanObserver.com
Murder, kidnapping
Of Kurdish Iranian Refugees In Iraq Raise Alarm
London, Iran Focus-
Aug. 26 – The cold-blooded murder of three Iranian Kurds in a refugee camp west
of the Iraqi capital and the abduction of two Iranian dissidents in recent days
have led to speculations that the new hard-line government in Tehran is taking
advantage of the worsening security situation in Iraq to liquidate its opponents
who have taken refuge in the neighbouring country.
Iranians in Al-Tash camp near the city of Ramadi reported this week that three
Kurdish refugees from Iran living in the camp were gunned down by unidentified
assailants. Their families’ repeated pleas to the Iraqi authorities have not led
to any investigation into the murders, camp residents said.
On Tuesday, gunmen entered the camp and abducted Adel Rassoul Maref, an Iranian
Kurd, in broad daylight. There has been no word on his fate since the abduction.
On Friday, August 19, eight gunmen raided the home of Galavij Mohammad, a
refugee from Iranian Kurdistan living in Al-Tash. He was taken away at gunpoint,
together with his daughter, Zana. Their bullet-riddled bodies were discovered by
camp residents about two kilometres away.
On Thursday, August 4, two Iranian dissidents from the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MeK)
opposition group were abducted by gunmen in Iraqi Interior Ministry police
uniform and patrol cars.
“There is clearly a pattern in this”, said Ahmed Shaikhli, a political scientist
and university lecturer in the Iraqi capital, in a telephone interview. “For two
years since the U.S. invasion, there were no major attacks on Iranian refugees
in Iraq. Now we are seeing a significant number of abductions and killings. The
obvious question is, why now?”
Analysts believe the new violence against Iranian dissidents in war-torn Iraq
reflects a fresh assessment by Tehran’s hard-line leaders of the situation in
their neighbouring state.
“Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have loyal protégés in powerful positions in some
of the ministries and para-military organisations in Iraq”, said Tim Hawkins, a
political analyst who covers Iraqi developments from his base in Kuwait. “What
deterred the Iranians from a more violent approach in the past was their fear of
possible American reprisals. Now, the Iranian leadership thinks it has a window
of opportunity to act against its opponents in Iraq, because the Americans are
deeply entangled in their own problems”.
The Islamic government’s officials have consistently demanded that Iranian
dissidents in Iraq, particularly some 4,000 members of the MeK living under U.S.
guard in Camp Ashraf, north of Baghdad, be handed over to Tehran or expelled
from Iraq. In a meeting with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, Iran’s top diplomat
in Baghdad again raised the issue, according to the official Iranian press.
Marc Henzelin, a prominent Geneva lawyer and a recognised expert on the law of
armed conflict, said the coalition forces in Iraq have a duty, under
international law, to protect Iranian dissidents and refugees in that country,
as they fall under international safeguards offered by the Fourth Geneva
Convention.
“The law is quite clear on this: these persons must be protected against
violence, abduction, and forced expulsion, including being sent back to Iran,
where they would face severe consequences”, Henzelin, who is a professor of
international humanitarian law at Geneva University, said.
Ahmed Shaikhli thinks Iraqi political figures must not accommodate what he calls
Iran’s “unacceptable demands”, including actions against Iranian refugees in
Iraq. He warns that Iraqi politicians who are perceived as serving Iran’s
interests risk doing badly in the next elections in December.
“There is a deep sense of resentment among ordinary Iraqis about those who are
doing Iran’s bidding”, Shaikhli said. “Most Iraqis want a democratic, secular,
and decent government that would defend Iraq’s national interests, not Iran’s.
You will see this resentment translate into votes in the next elections”.
For now, at least, the dangers facing Iranian dissidents and political refugees
in Iraq are worrying both the Multi-national Force in Iraq (MNF-I) and
international organisations. The U.S.-led MNF-I strongly condemned the abduction
of two MeK members earlier this month and said it was working with the Iraqi
authorities to find the missing men.
“MNF-I units have checked with numerous police and Ministry of Interior units
and stations, and have notified the MNF-I hostage working group”, the
multinational force said in a press release.
The Geneva-based office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
and the International Committee of the Red Cross have also conveyed their
concern over the abduction to Iraqi and coalition authorities, according to the
victims’ families.
As the world watches the chilling scenes of mindless violence in Iraq, families
and friends of murdered Iranian refugees in that country mourn their loss in
silence. |
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