Iran: Support for MKO terrorists will backfire on Europeans
A senior Iranian Judiciary official has warned Europe that its support for the anti-Iran terrorist Mujahedin-e-Khalq Organization (MKO) will come at a price just as it did with the Daesh Takfiri terrorist group.
Kazem Gharibabadi, the Judiciary Chief’s Deputy for International Affairs and Secretary of High Council for Human Rights, on Friday censured the European Parliament for supporting the MKO terrorists and referring to it as ‘political opponents.’
It is shameful for members of the European Parliament to pursue their own political interests and turn a blind eye to the crimes committed by the MKO terrorists, which has martyred over 12,000 innocent Iranians and still continues its terrorist activities while freely traveling through European countries, he said.
“The Europeans should know that as their support for Daesh has backfired on them in a way that more than 4,000 Daesh members were European citizens and created insecurity for them, their support for the MKO will equally be costly,” the senior Iranian human rights official said.
Gharibabadi said the United States and Europe have committed the most heinous crimes against Iran by supporting terrorist groups, sheltering them and excluding them from the list of terrorist groups as well as imposing or implementing unlawful and oppressive sanctions.
“The European Parliament and European countries must stand accountable for their human rights violations against Iranians. They are in no position to preach others in the field of human rights,” the top Iranian rights official stated.
The ill-famed MKO is currently based in Albania, where it enjoys freedom of activity after being delisted by the European Union and the United States in 2009 and 2012, respectively.
An Albanian historian and journalist said in a tweet on Thursday that the country’s police have alerted the US embassy that the MKO terrorists are involved in various criminal activities in Europe, including human trafficking, with possible links to Daesh.
European Parliament resolution on death penalty in Iran politically-motivated
Gharibabadi also denounced the recent European Parliament resolution on the death penalty in Iran, saying it is based on political goals and fails to represent the existing realities in the country. "This resolution encompasses distorted and fabricated issues and is not consistent with the existing realities in Iran, but it has been prepared with completely political purposes."
He said the execution penalty is being implemented in 55 countries throughout the world and urged the European Parliament and European countries to respect other nations’ laws and cultural diversity when it comes to human rights issues.
According to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the death penalty is permissible when it comes to capital crimes, he said, criticizing the Europeans for imposing their own standards on other countries in contradiction to their sovereignty.
Europeans must learn to respect national sovereignty of other countries and know that they cannot support their criminal citizens and demand their release through threats, the official said.
SS