USCCAR Deplores Iraq's Plan for Forcible Deportation of 36 Iranian Dissidents, Demands Immediate US Intervention

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Mon Oct 5, 2009 11:36pm EDT

USCCAR Deplores Iraq's Plan for Forcible Deportation of 36 Iranian Dissidents,
Demands Immediate US Intervention



WASHINGTON, Oct. 5 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The US Committee for Camp Ashraf
Residents deplores the decision by Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to
forcibly deport the 36 residents of Camp Ashraf abducted during the deadly
attack on the Camp by Iraqi forces in July. 


USCCAR also calls on the Obama administration to live up to its legal and
moral obligations to the People of Ashraf, and to intervene to secure the
immediate release of the 36 hostages. 


The administration's continued silence toward the inhuman and unlawful
treatment of these individuals has emboldened Mr. al-Maliki to pursue their
expulsion in blatant violation of international law, Iraq's own laws and
constitution, and written assurances given to the United States. 


On Sunday, the Associated Press reported that an official in al-Maliki's
office said "Iraq is looking for a country to accept 36 detained members of an
Iranian opposition group [PMOI/MEK]."  Those men remain in detention despite
three judicial decrees that they be released.


Mr. al-Maliki is preparing the ground for transferring the 36 to Iran or to a
Tehran-friendly country which ultimately would send them to Iran. Either would
be in flagrant breach of customary and conventional international law, and the
standards of international humanitarian law. If any transfer outside Iraq is
indeed contemplated, it must be to an EU country or to the United States,
where these hostages have family members.


In an ominous development today, the 36 were transferred to a special prison
near Al-Muthana Airport which is mainly operated by al-Maliki's office and
notorious for arbitrary and harsh treatment of people held there.


In March 2007, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees also warned competent
Iraqi authorities and the Multi-National Force-Iraq "to refrain from any
action that could endanger the life or the security of these individuals, such
as their forcible deportation from Iraq or their forced displacement inside
Iraq."


In a letter dated October 15, 2008, to Iraq's Minister for Foreign Affairs,
the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights urged that Government to protect
Ashraf residents from forcible deportation, expulsion, or repatriation in
violation of the non-refoulement principle, and to refrain from any action
that would endanger their life or security.




Mr. al-Maliki is responsible for any harm done to the 36 hostages, many of
whom are on the brink of death after 69 days of hunger strike and severe
beatings in the hands of security forces.  


The United States is also responsible for safety and human rights of these
individuals. According to Article 45 of Fourth Geneva Convention this
responsibly remains in effect even while Ashraf residents are in the custody
of the Government of Iraq, to whom they were transferred in exchange for
specific assurances given to the United States. The appalling silence and
inaction of the Obama administration, which has superficially lamented about
the "avoidable tragedy" in Ashraf, could prove deadly for the 36 abductees.


SOURCE  U.S. Committee for Camp Ashraf Residents

Majid Roshan of US Committee for Camp Ashraf Residents, +1-202-640-1947
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