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Maryam Rajavi
President-Elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran

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Indeed, our solution and our path are based on freedom. We seek to revive the oppressed gem of humanity: freedom.
President-Elect of the Iranian Resistance
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Home arrow Support arrow Iran's Parliament: Not Representative of the People

Iran's Parliament: Not Representative of the People PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 17 March 2008

By Lord Robin Corbett

Middle East Times, 14 March - Parliamentary elections in Iran today will see radical Islamists consolidate their domination of the political landscape and any form of so-called "moderation" shunned away. Such has been dictated by Iran's chief ayatollah, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Up for grabs today are 290 seats in the regime's consultative body called the Majlis. Under the Islamic republic's hard-line constitution, all candidates must go through several levels of strict vetting including by the ultra-conservative Guardians Council. The GC, whose clerical members are hand-picked by the supreme leader himself, must be convinced that the individual is loyal in both heart and mind to the notion of velayat-e faqih (rule of the supreme jurisprudent, otherwise known as Khamenei) in order to give its approval.

This year, 2,000 candidates were disqualified, leaving the so-called "reformist" faction with about 55 candidates on the slate out of an original 450. This week, Khamenei urged Iranians to avoid voting for candidates who are deemed too close to the Western enemies of the Islamic republic in parliamentary polls.

The Majlis is less representative of the people and more an indicator of the regime's domestic and international temperament and crumbling state of affairs.

With more than 90 percent of the population seeking regime change and the international community taking aim at Tehran's clandestine nuclear projects, the regime is increasingly getting a sense of isolation. Khamenei understands that to maintain his grip on power his regime must be unified. For this reason, in 2005 he instructed the Revolutionary Guards to bring to power one of their own – Mahmoud Ahmadinejad – to pursue his fundamental policies without the slightest opposition. Since then, senior Guards commanders have moved into high government positions to ensure that Khamenei can steer the regime clear of all domestic storms with an iron fist. Today's elections are likely to mirror the phoney elections that brought Ahmadinejad to the presidency.

Meanwhile, the Iranian people, heeding a call by the country's true opposition movement, the People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran (PMOI, or MEK), will boycott the polls in their millions.

We in the free world should be backing the millions of Iranians who are longing for genuine democratic change, rather than impeding them in order to appease a regime which has executed over 120,000 of the PMOI's supporters and is killing and maiming our troops in Afghanistan and Iraq.

To its shame, some Western countries have chosen to blacklist the PMOI in defiance of two court verdicts.

Then British Home Secretary Jack Straw admitted in 2006 that when he banned the PMOI five years earlier, he did so at the behest of Iranian officials. This is ironic, since the PMOI was the group that revealed to the world the regime's secret nuclear sites, for which we owe it a great debt. In December 2006, the European Court of Justice ruled that the ban on the PMOI was "unlawful." In November 2007, the UK's High Court ruled that the proscription of the PMOI by the government was "flawed" and "perverse." It ordered the home secretary to immediately lift the ban. Even though the government lost its motion to appeal in December, it continues to maintain the ban. The government's actions are a mockery of the rule of law.

At a time when the Iranian people displaying their resentment of the mullahs' vile regime through daily protests and a widespread boycott of today's polls, our government now has a duty to offer them the support of the British people.

We should follow the advice of Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, president-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran. She has urged the West to neither seek regime change through foreign military intervention nor appease Tehran's ruthless ruler. Instead, she wants us to support the Iranian people and their resistance to bring about democratic change. The NCRI, the resistance coalition of which the PMOI is a leading party member, is the democratic alternative to this regime, with representatives from across the political strata.

There are two actions that the West should take to tip the balance in favor of the people in their struggle for change. First and foremost, it should lift the ban on the PMOI. Secondly, it should convince the U.N. Security Council to impose comprehensive economic, arms, technological and oil embargo against the mullahs' regime.

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Lord Corbett of Castle Vale, from British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's ruling Labour Party, is chairman of the British Parliamentary Committee for Iran Freedom.
 

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