ARAB EUROPEAN RELATIONS - Oct 24 - EU Court Rejects Freeze On Iranian Opposition Group's Funds.
A prominent Iranian opposition group win an appeal against a EU
decision to freeze its funds. But the group, the People's
Mujahedeen, will remain on a European terror list because the decision
concerned a blacklist compiled last year, not the most recent list that
was compiled this year. The decision by the European Court of First
Instance in Luxembourg follows a ruling in May by the British Court of
Appeal that the British government was wrong to include the group on its
list of banned terrorist groups. The decision Oct 24 could increase
pressure on the EU to relax its ban on the group. The EU first placed
the group on a terror blacklist in 2002. But the court said Oct 24 the
evidence presented was "manifestly insufficient to provide legal
justification for continuing to freeze" the group's funds.
Maryam Rajavi, the president-elect of the National Council of Resistance
of Iran, the group's political wing, said in a statement on Oct 24
that the ruling "puts an end to the unjust label of
terrorism". She accused some European governments of seeking to
maintain the ban to nurture good relations with the current leadership
of Iran. The group is regarded as potentially the most important force
in the Iranian resistance. Legalization could enable the group to raise
money and organize resistance to the ruling ayatollahs in Iran.
According to the EU court, the Iranian group was founded in 1965 with
the goal of replacing the government of the Shah of Iran and
subsequently its successors with a democracy. The court said that in the
past the group had an armed branch operating in Iran, but noted that the
group had renounced all military activity in 2001.
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