Iran’s Regime Faces Setbacks in Campaigns Against Iranian Resistance

This past week, Iran's regime encountered major setbacks in its ongoing campaigns against the Iranian Resistance.
This past week, Iran's regime encountered major setbacks in its ongoing campaigns against the Iranian Resistance.

This past week, Iran's regime encountered major setbacks in its ongoing campaigns against the Iranian Resistance.

 

The Swedish Appeals Court upheld the life sentence of Hamid Noury, a former torturer and prison guard at Gohardasht Prison, known for his role in the 1988 massacre of political prisoners in Iran. This ruling represents a substantial blow to the regime’s efforts to manipulate the Justice Movement of the Iranian Resistance, aiming to diminish the severity of the regime’s crimes against humanity.

Expressing frustration over the People’s Mojahedin of Iran (PMOI/MEK) ignoring their “absentia trial” by the judiciary, Gharib Abadi’s statements inadvertently revealed the regime’s own skepticism towards these mock trials, which follow four decades of executions and mass killings.

 

Simultaneously, Kazem Gharib Abadi, the self-styled international and human rights deputy in Iran's judiciary, inadvertently highlighted the regime's judicial shortcomings and disgrace through his comments about the sham trial against members of the Iranian Resistance.
Kazem Gharib Abadi, the self-styled international and human rights deputy in Iran’s judiciary, inadvertently highlighted the regime’s judicial shortcomings and disgrace through his comments about the sham trial against members of the Iranian Resistance.

 

Farhikhtegan, a news outlet, cautioned on July 30 that even definitive convictions in these trials would likely not benefit the regime and could potentially harm the PMOI. Gharib Abadi, in his desperate attempt to justify the trials, suggested that the PMOI could submit their documents for the government-appointed lawyers to use, despite their absence.

He argued that the absence of PMOI-appointed lawyers should not hinder the trial or the pursuit of justice.He further stated that the contact details of these government-appointed lawyers are available and that the PMOI could intervene at any stage, even appointing their lawyers if desired.

Gharib Abadi’s subsequent remarks revealed the regime’s underlying intentions with these show trials and “trials in absentia,” which aim to fabricate cases and levy accusations against the PMOI in foreign countries. Following a sigh over the judiciary’s defeat, he ominously warned Sweden that the trial of an “innocent Iranian citizen” would not be without consequences, implying potential retaliatory actions.

 

However, his statements on the state-run news network also acknowledged the failure of the regime's efforts in the Hamid Noury trial, admitting that it had inadvertently become a case against the Islamic Republic of Iran itself.
Gharib Abadi’s statements on the state-run news network also acknowledged the failure of the regime’s efforts in the Hamid Noury trial, admitting that it had inadvertently become a case against the Islamic Republic of Iran itself.

 

These developments underscore the regime’s dual objectives: countering the growing popularity of the Iranian Resistance within Iran and laying the groundwork for more terrorist threats against the Resistance and its supporters abroad.

Nonetheless, the PMOI and the Iranian Resistance, undeterred by these threats, continue their determined pursuit of freedom for Iran. This commitment is evident in the ongoing activities of the PMOI Resistance Units across Iran and the global campaigns against the regime.

 

 

 


MEK Iran (follow us on Twitter and Facebook), Maryam Rajavi’s on her siteTwitter & Facebook, NCRI  (Twitter & Facebook), and People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran – MEK IRAN – YouTu