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HomeIran News NowIran Opposition & ResistanceBackers of Iran opposition enter third month of UN sit-in

Backers of Iran opposition enter third month of UN sit-in

Rally near paris in 2008Source: The French News Agency (AFP)*

UNITED NATIONS (AFP) – Supporters of the People's Mujahedeen Organization of Iran, the main Iranian opposition group, began the third month of a protest in front of UN headquarters Tuesday, seeking protection for residents of a group encampment in Iraq.

Rally near paris 2008Source: The French News Agency (AFP)*

UNITED NATIONS (AFP) – Supporters of the People's Mujahedeen Organization of Iran, the main Iranian opposition group, began the third month of a protest in front of UN headquarters Tuesday, seeking protection for residents of a group encampment in Iraq.

The several dozen protesters who have parked themselves across from the UN complex for 61 days want a meeting with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon to draw his attention to the plight of 3,800 people in Camp Ashraf, said Nasser Rashidi, an activist with the movement.

The camp, located about 100 kilometers (60 miles) from Baghdad and 80 kilometers (50 miles) from the Iranian border, has for 22 years housed members of the PMOI.

Founded in 1965 with the aim of replacing first the Shah and then the clerical regime in Iran, PMOI has in the past operated an army inside Iran.

After leaving Iran in the 1980s, its members sought refuge abroad, notably in Iraq where they established the military Camp Ashraf in Diyala province.

The US military disarmed the PMOI after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in April 2003.

According to Rashidi, director of the National Coalition of pro-Democracy Advocates, the demonstrators in front of the UN want Ban "to monitor the situation in Camp Ashraf and to ensure that the Iraqi government admits that the residents of the camp are political refugees protected by the Geneva Convention.

"Their fear is that the influence of Iran on the Iraqi Government could lead to their expulsion, or worse, to their extradition back to Iran," especially after the US military withdraws from Iraq, he said.

"As long as the US has a presence in Iraq, the US is responsible for the protection of the residents in Camp Ashraf," Rashidi said.

* Editor's note: above are excerpts from a report by the French News Agency (AFP)