The judges gave the federal government until March 26 to respond to the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI), which was added to the list by President Bill Clinton when he was trying to open talks with the theocratic Iranian regime in 1997.The Iranian resistance won another victory in a U.S. federal court this week, when a three-judge panel ruled the group has a right to a speedy hearing on its petition to be removed from the U.S. terrorist list - after nearly two years of delay by the
State Department.
“It’s certainly a favorable development,” said
Ali Safavi, president of Near East Policy Research in Northern Virginia and a supporter of the
PMOI.
The
Iraqi government has ordered the Iranians expelled from the country by the end of April, but no other nation will accept them as refugees because the
PMOI is on the U.S. terror list. Iraqi security forces have attacked the unarmed camp residents twice, killing 11 in July 2009 and 34 in April 2011.
In 2010, the
court ruled that the
State Department had violated the
PMOI’s constitutional right to due process two years earlier when then-Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice refused a request from the group to be removed from the list.
The
court gave the
Obama administration 180 days to review the status of the
PMOI, which renounced its armed struggle against
Iran in 2003, when U.S. forces disarmed the rebels after the invasion of
Iraq.
Nearly two years later, the
government is still arguing it needs more time to consider whether the resistance meets the standards to remain listed as a terrorist group.
Justice Department attorney
Douglas N. Letter, in his response to the
PMOI case, said the
State Department must review “highly classified information, expert analyses of the material in the administration record, delicate foreign relations concerns and complex national security determinations.”
He argued that a decision on the
PMOI’s status would have to be made by high-level officials at the State, Treasury and Justice departments.
“While the secretary [of state] dithers on
PMOI’s request to revoke its [terrorist] designation, Ashraf residents face a continuing threat of deadly violence from Iraqi forces, and other countries are reluctant to accept them for resettlement as long as
PMOI remains on the list,” Mr. Dinh said.
Earlier this week, members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee pressed
Mrs. Clinton to take the
PMOI off the terrorist list.
“We are deeply concerned about the security and safety of these residents of
Camp Ashraf,”
Mrs. Clinton said. “We continue to work on our review of the [
PMOI] designation.”