Exhibition in Sweden bullied by MKO members in anti-Iranian terrorist cult
Bianca Rahimi
Press TV, Stockholm
Members of the anti-Iranian terrorist cult MKO attacked the reporter and the news team on Press TV while watching an exhibition held in Stockholm, Sweden, which highlighted the group’s crimes.
The exhibition became chaotic after the sect members violently assaulted the press TV team and other participants.
Press television crews, who reported on an exhibition showing MKO bombings and killings in Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, were brutally attacked by unruly supporters of the group.
Listed as a terrorist organization by large sections of the international community, the infamous group has blood from 17,000 Iranians on its hands.
After being expelled from Iran after the revolution, the MKO based itself in Camp Ashraf in Iraq, where its members were forced to pledge allegiance to their leader Masoud Rajavi and show it with sectarian behavior. For women, that meant divorcing their husbands and marrying him.
Many families spent several years on the outskirts of the camp begging for their children to be released, but to no avail. The camp was later disbanded in the wake of the US invasion of Iraq.
Until 2012, MKO was on the US terrorist list. It was also blacklisted by the EU until 2009. Since its removal, the new leader of the sect, Maryam Rajavi, has established close relations with Western officials.
From what took place on the streets of Stockholm today, it is shockingly clear that the EU has become a refuge for MKO, which attacks journalists with little fear of retaliation.