Iran General News44th anniversary of execution of Iranian MEK founders

44th anniversary of execution of Iranian MEK founders

-

Iran Focus

London, 24 May – This week marks the 44th anniversary of the execution of the founders of Iran’s main opposition group.

On 25 May 1972, the founders and leaders of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI or MEK), were executed by death squads after months of imprisonment and torture from the regime of the Shah.

The MEK, a group which sought, and still seeks, a secular Iranian government, was considered one of the main threats to the regime of the Shah.

The Shah’s secret police, SAVAK, arrested all MEK leaders and most of its members in a series of raids in 1971.

The founders, Mohammad Hanifnejad, Said Mohsen, and Ali-Asghar Badizadegan along with two other leaders, Mahmoud Askarizadeh, and Rasoul Meshkinfam stood firm in the face of the Shah’s regime and paid with their lives.

The origins of the MEK

The MEK was founded on September 6, 1965, by engineers; Hanifnejad, Mohsen, and Badizadegan. All three were once members of the Liberation Movement; created by Medhi Bazargan in 1961 and outlawed, along with other pro-democracy groups, in 1963 following the June Uprising in which opponents to the Shah’s regime were gunned down in the streets.

The men wanted to create a new path to democracy and began by meeting with like-minded friends for a twice-weekly discussion group focusing on religion, history, philosophy, and revolutionary theory.

They sought to discover the true interpretation of Islam which, they have shown, is incredibly democratic and compatible with modern ideals. The MEK views freedom, human rights and the equality of people regardless of gender, race or religion as commitments that were set out in the Quran, in teachings from the Prophet Muhammad and by other senior members of the faith.

They spent six years formulating a progressive view of Islam and developing a strategy to replace the monarchy with a democratic government but this scared the Shah, as the MEK’s interpretation of Islam conflicted with the non-democratic, extremist view that he portrayed.

Massoud Rajavi became leader of the MEK after the execution of the group’s founders. His death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment following a successful campaign by his brother in Geneva, which also involved the French President Georges Pompidou and Francois Mitterrand.

Rajavi led the MEK from various prisons, including whilst in Tehran Komiteh’s torture centre. He warned against religious fanaticism, religious backwardness and despotism touted by the Shah.

Rajavi’s brother, Dr. Kazem Rajavi, was assassinated by assailants linked to Iran’s current theocratic establishment in 1990 in Geneva.

In 1979, the Shah fled Iran. By then, most democratic opposition leaders had been imprisoned or executed which provided Ayatollah Khomeini and his mullahs the opportunity to ‘hijack the revolution’, according to the MEK. The MEK’s criticism of this reactionary leadership was used against them by senior clerics who encouraged violence against MEK supporters.

In 1980, Mr. Rajavi said: “Freedom is a divine blessing…Anyone trying to restrict human freedom has neither understood Islam nor mankind and the [anti-monarchist] revolution. Freedom is indispensable to the survival of mankind as human beings. Otherwise, human beings would be no different from animals and could not be held responsible for anything”.

 

Latest news

Canadian Intel: Tehran’s Operations in Canada Have Become More Aggressive and Widespread

The Canadian Security Intelligence Service announced in its annual report on foreign interventions in Canada in 2023 that during...

Price of Housing in Tehran At $1,340 Per Square Meter

Despite the housing market recession, the price of housing in Tehran increased in March 2024, with the average price...

Canadian Parliament Approves Proposal to Proscribe Iran’s IRGC

On Wednesday, May 8, members of the Canadian House of Commons unanimously voted to add the IRGC to the...

Iran’s Medical Society is in Crisis

Iraj Fazel, the head of the Surgeons Society and former Minister of Health of the Iranian regime, has warned...

Iran’s Regime Evading Oil Sanctions Through Malaysia

Brian Nelson, the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, sees Iran's increased capacity to transport...

Iran’s Cooperation Level Unacceptable, IAEA Director Says

The Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) described the regime's cooperation with the agency as unacceptable upon...

Must read

The pain of the World Cup for a former Iranian player

Seattle Times: Thirty-six years ago, as a young Iranian...

Iran’s crackdown on “freedom and having fun”

Iran Focus London, 20 Aug - A crackdown by...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you

Exit mobile version