Free Iran
2018
|
The
criticism levelled at former prime minister Stephen Harper for speaking to a
“Free Iran” rally near Paris last
Saturday is unfair. At that rally, Harper thanked the tens of
thousands of participants for their “long battle for a free and democratic
Iran,” without endorsing any political party.
Harper
wasn’t alone at the rally. Canada’s delegation at the event included the former
prime minister, Liberal MP Judy Sgro, former Conservative foreign minister John
Baird, former Liberal MP Raymonde Folco, former Conservative MP Paul Forseth,
Liberal supporter David Matas, Conservative MP Candice Bergen, and me, a former
Liberal cabinet minister.
It was
entirely appropriate to attend.
The
European Union removed the People’s Mojahedin of Iran (or PMOI) from its list
of foreign terrorist organizations in 2009, noting that it had been placed on
the list purely to appease the mullahs in Iran. In 2010, the European
Parliament passed a declaration calling on the United States to remove it from
the American list. The resolution became official when more than half the
members of the 736-seat chamber signed it, but support was nearly unanimous. The
resolution also called on Iraq to cease its blockade of Camp Ashraf, a
settlement of more than 3,000 Iranian dissidents near the border between the
two countries.
The PMOI
had been on the U.S. list since 1997, when the Bill Clinton administration
added it, seeking to secure closer cooperation with Tehran. The U.S. finally
removed the PMOI in September, 2012. The State Department said its decision had
been taken in view of the PMOI’s public renunciation of its former military
role and its co-operation in the closure of its paramilitary base in Iraq.
Following
the lead of the U.S. and the European Union, the Harper government in December
2012 dropped the PMOI from Canada’s list.
As co-chair
of the NGO Canadian Friends of a Democratic Iran, I wrote to then prime
minister Harper in 2009: “We are writing to urge you and your government to
take a principled stand against the regime in Tehran for its brutal suppression
of the Iranian people in their renewed uprising for human dignity, freedom and
democracy … Iranians spoke loudly and clearly again when they poured into the
streets in Tehran and all major cities across the country in recent days to
show the world that they are ready to risk their lives to bring about
democratic change in Iran.”
Struan
Stevenson, who represented Scotland in the European Parliament for 15 years and
is now co-ordinator of the Campaign for Iran Change, noted after last week’s
Paris event: “The nationwide protests (currently underway) covered all 31
Iranian provinces and 142 cities. The 80 million Iranian citizens, over half of
whom are under-30, have made it clear that they are fed up with fundamentalist
rule. They are fed up with living in poverty as the venally corrupt mullahs
siphon off the country’s wealth to fill their pockets and to finance conflict
and terror throughout the Middle East.”
The Iranian
regime has earned the title of the world’s number one state sponsor of
terrorism.
Since the
Paris event, an intercepted plot to bomb the hall near the Charles De Gaulle
airport where last weekend’s rally was held has been exposed. Three suspects
were arrested in France and Germany last weekend. A diplomat at the Iranian
embassy in Vienna was also arrested in Germany over the terror threat that was
discovered by Belgian authorities.
The Iranian
regime has earned the title of the world’s number one state sponsor of
terrorism.
Staff at
the Iranian embassy in Vienna said their ambassador was not immediately
available for comment, but a PMOI official alleged the individual arrested in
Germany had been station chief of Iran’s ministry of intelligence and security
(MOIS) in Vienna since 2014.
The Paris
event attracted tens of thousands from across the world to hear National
Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) president-elect Maryam Rajavi. The NCRI is
an umbrella bloc of opposition groups in exile that seeks an end to Shi’ite
Muslim clerical rule in Iran. Rajavi seeks to restore peace, freedom, democracy
and human rights, stopping torture and the death penalty and ending foreign
meddling.
Maryam
Rajavi’s 10-point plan also calls for a new constitution based on gender
equality, separation of religion and state, and a non-nuclear Iran.
David
Kilgour is the former Secretary of State for Latin America and Africa
(1997-2002) and Asia-Pacific (2002-2003) in the cabinet of Prime Minister Jean
Chrétien. He represented south-east Edmonton in the House of Commons from 1979
to 2006. He is co-chair of the NGO Canadian Friends of a Democratic Iran.
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