While most in the US and around the globe cheer the imminent departure of US troops from Iraq, there are 3,400 men, women and children, Iranian refugees inside Iraq Camp Ashraf, wondering if they are only 68-days from extinction? While late headlines from CNN Sunday night said US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned Iran to keep its hands off Iraq, there is little likelihood that rogue nation state will heed her warning.
Located 60 km NW of Baghdad and about the same distance from the Iranian border to the west, Camp Ashraf is a constant target of harassment and bloody attacks from Iraqi troops and Iranian secret police. Earlier this spring a coordinated Iraqi police and Iranian Qod led attack left 36 refugees dead and more than 350 injured. Massive loudspeakers blare pro-Iranian government slogans night and day into the camp and residents are denied medical care. Around the world Ashraf refugees receive speeches of support from UK and EU parliamentary humanitarian committees, yet no one seems able to take responsibility for solving the humanitarian crisis which could now aptly be called a pending genocide.
Tuesday morning in Westminster there will be yet another cross-parliamentary Committee meeting to study what to do in light of what the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) call credible threats of another planned assault on Camp Ashraf. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki has ordered the camp closed by 31 December in violation of international law. President in exile Madame Rajavi has said any bloodshed caused or witnessed by the Al Maliki government is the direct responsibility of the US and UN. Both parties (and, more importantly, their mainstream media) barely cover this story… on page A27, below the fold.
Everybody continues talking past each other, there is a growing sense of hopelessness and the clock continues to tick on a story most journalists are afraid to cover because the US still considers NCRI (their Arabic name is the PMOI) a terrorist organisation. This designation is a holdover from the 1990s despite universal agreement it was spurious from the beginning. It was designed by the Clinton Administration as a red herring condemnation trade-off with which to normalise relations with Iran who had, in theory, elected a moderate leader. Of course that is also when they began their secret nuclear programme. So the ‘terrorist’ designation, since renounced by the UK and EU, has been used as a cover to ignore the crisis and blame anyone who speaks out in their favour as “soft on terrorism.”
It’s time for people to move yet the landscape is filled with obstacles:
■Iraq Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki is clearly in bed with NCRI’s Iranian government tormentors (the price of a very shaky internal peace between Sunni and Shia Muslims).
■Iraq does not want the responsibility or cost of maintaining the 25-year old camp.
■The Iranian regime wants this opposition group of former fighters eliminated.
■The UN continues to drag its feet when peacekeepers should already be on the ground dismantling loudspeakers and protecting the camp, instead they hope someone else will take care of the issue.
■The US government sees their military exit as the Iraqi government’s issue thus closing the book on the issue.
■The EU and UK Parliaments have held meetings but while quick to militarily stop Qadaffi from slaughtering 70,000 people in Benghazi; will not likely do anything other than issue proclamations to help the people of Camp Ashraf.
This is a collective failure of will.
The Syrian people did not get help and protection from the sadistic Basheer. Now the worry is 3,400 people in the Iraqi desert will also be let down because no matter how hard they try, their voices are constantly lost in a sea of “more important” news.
Denis G Campbell is author of the book Egypt Unsh@ckled: Using social media to @#:) the System. He is also editor-in-chief of UK Progressive Magazine and contributes politics and business articles for several global newspapers and magazines. He also provides regular commentary for BBC, China Radio International and others.