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Attack on Al-Hadi Foundation: The building was located in Damavand Ave., Tehran No St., at the corner of Qassem Abad petrol station. The MKO has said the foundation is a centre for the police forces which must be exploded. My commander threw a hand bomb and two hand grenades into the building. A man was injured and the building was destroyed.
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The IRF has been successful in its fund raising efforts. Washington Post staff writer, Molly Sinclair, wrote in 1985 that registration papers filed by the IRF in Maryland and in Virginia disclosed that the organization collected $97,230 from American contributors during the year that ended in September, 1984. The U.S. Department of State in a 1987 public source report cited that the IRF is not only affiliated with the MEK, but is in fact a front name for the group.
(FBI)
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The Bam earthquake charity event held in January of 2005 demonstrated how the MKO uses front organizations to raise funds for itself and for its cause. “Of the 23 organizations listed as sponsors for the event, 17 are known MKO front groups or linked to prominent MKO members and activists. None appears to be registered with the Internal Revenue Service or state agencies as legitimate businesses or charities.”
(CENTER FOR POLICING TERRORISM)
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As stated, regular monitoring technique within the cult of Mojahedin to have the mind and behavioral changes of the insiders under control is weekly confession and inquisition sessions (Jari sessions through which members have to confess before others of their thoughts and intentions and to renew allegiance to the ideology and the ideological leadership of the organization. The statements made by the detached members can demonstrate a greater vision
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Whatever the exact degree of Western involvement with the MKO, the group remains a candidate for partnership with Western governments, who preach fighting terror. The MKO might be a footnote in the wider struggle, but it’s the nail that punctures the great powers’ approach to Iran. Why harbor the group if it’s terrorist? If the West can’t agree on who’s a terrorist, how do they expect an agreement with the Muslim world?
(Daily Star)
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A constant, regular monitoring technique within the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO) to have the mind and behavioural changes of the insiders under control is weekly confessions sessions (Jari sessions), better to call inquisition, through which members have to confess their thoughts and intentions to others and are in fact forced to pledge allegiance to the leadership.
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Under the nom de guerre Qassem, I joined the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO) in Iran’s western province of Kurdistan in summer 1983. In was sent to Tehran the next year before I was trained for military operations at several bases in Kurdistan. There I was introduced to Saeed Jalali as my commander. Along with him, I was involved in 4 terror attacks.
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I was introduced to Mohammad Reza Salmani to make a two-people terror team. We had 4 operations before we were arrested in April 1985. 1. Assassinating a man called Ali Qomi in Golbarg St., Narmak. I was the commander and the firing person while Mohammad Reza was riding a motorbike. The man was shot to death while another man was injured while following us.
(Confessions of Saeed Jalali)
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Under the nom de guerres Mohammad, Yunos, Mohammadi and Mojtaba Khodasafian, I joined the MKO in about May 1984. We started by writing slogans against the Islamic Republic, distributing MKO declarations and pouring glue into the locks of the pro-Revolution’s shops. Then, as a three-member group, we moved to military operations and attacks in which we set 8 cars on fire up to January 1985.
(Confessions of Ahmad Abbasi)
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A group of Najaf scholars under his supervision decided to disclose some treacherous secrets associated with Shah’s regime. To obey Imam’s order, he went to Khorramabad to teach religious sciences there. He was also founder of Kamalieh School in that city. After his campaign against Shah’s regime, he was banished from Khorramabad and sent to Noorabad Mamasani and later to other cities, but at the peak of revolution he returned to Qom.
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