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NCRI
Crowd in Tirana |
As Iran finds itself engulfed in domestic and
external turmoil, the opposition in-exile enjoys the prowess and cohesion to
elect a new secretary general.
A new administration in Washington has been
ramping up the heat, punishing Tehran for meddling in other states’ affairs and
advancing its ballistic missile drive. All the while Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei has seen his representative rejected by two senior Shiite leaders in Iraq, the
proxy war in Yemen going south and Tehran’s support to maintain Syria’s Bashar
Assad in power eating up crucial resources. Internally, the Iranian people are
stepping up their protests to significant scales.
In now daily protests thousands of investors are
demanding their savings from state-run institutions, and the city of Baneh in
western Iran recently witnessed clashes as locals took to arms to protest the
ruthless killing of porters by state security forces. In a parallel significant
development, the Iranian opposition People’s Mojahedin Organization of
Iran(PMOI/MEK) held its congress on Wednesday marking its 52nd anniversary and
sitting to elect a new secretary general
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NCRI
Iran Opposition Election: Crowd in Tirana
This process was held in six different cities, including Tirana, the Albanian
Capital, where most MEK members are stationed after their long ordeal in Iraq,
along with five other countries. Ms. Zahra Merrikhi was elected as the new MEK
Secretary General, replacing Ms. Zohreh Akhiyani, who served from 2011. The MEK Secretary General
is elected for one two-year term, which can be extended considering the
circumstances.
In view of its unique nature and differences from
state or party elections, MEK rules and regulations define the election of a secretary general to be
held in three different assemblies.
In the first such assembly, held by members of the
MEK Central Council on August 20, 2017, an initial 12 candidates were
introduced, of which four reached the next stage with Ms. Merrikhi receiving a majority of the
votes.
At the second assembly, held two weeks later,
senior MEK officials and cadres casted their ballots for the final four
candidates, with Ms. Merrikhi leading the vote tally again. The third and final assembly, held on
Wednesday, witnessed all MEK members raising their hands and unanimously
electing Ms. Merrikhi as the new MEK Secretary General. Born in 1959, Ms.
Merrikhi joined the MEK in the years leading to the 1979 revolution. She was summoned and interrogated
several times by the Shah’s intelligence service for her activities. Her
younger brother, Ali, was killed by the current Iranian government back in
1988. From 2003 onward she served as the coordinator of the office representing
Iranian opposition leader Maryam Rajavi, President of the National Council of
Resistance of Iran (NCRI), a coalition of opposition groups including the MEK.
The democratic approach adopted by the MEK in this
election process is in stark contrast to that imposed on its compatriots by the ruling clerics of
Iran for the past four decades. It also undercuts the oft-repeated, Iran
government’s inspired characterization that it has an authoritarian structure.
If we were to take the Iran’s presidential “election” into consideration, we would view a selection by
an unelected few, far from anything resembling an election in today’s 21st
century.
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All candidates are evaluated for their utter
devotion and obedience to the clerical rule and Supreme Leader. Before May’s
vote even Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who served as the president for eight years and Khamenei launched a
massive nationwide crackdown in 2009 to quell any opposition to his engineered
reelection, was disqualified from this year’s presidential race. As the
political establishment in Tehran sees its founding fathers dying one after another and Khamenei
himself battling severe health issues and allegedly cancer, there are serious
woes about the future of his rule and the ruling clerics in its entirety. And
with conservative cleric Ebrahim Raisi – said to be groomed by Khamenei to reach the presidency and
eventually succeeding him at his throne – failing to unseat Hassan Rouhani from
the presidency, no new face with the necessary majority support is seen to lead
this political establishment into its unknown future.
It is a complete different story for the MEK
leadership, however, as Ms. Merrikhi currently enjoys the support of 18
co-Secretaries General (including seven former Secretaries General) and three deputies from the
organization’s younger generation.
Narges Azodanlou, 36, Rabi’eh Mofidi, 35, and Nasrin
Massih, 39, all born during or after the 1979 revolution, represent the MEK’s
dynamic characteristic and how this organization is able to adapt and deliver
young new leaders for this fast-changing world. In short, Merrikhi’s election
demonstrates process, structure, depth of leadership ranks, and a genuine and
practical commitment to gender equality, especially in leadership positions.
“Today, the PMOI, with the help of the Iranian people, is prepared as never
before to overthrow the clerical regime,” Ms. Merrikhi said after expressing
gratitude to her predecessors and vowing to remain loyal to the MEK’s ultimate
objective of establishing freedom and democracy in Iran. Welcoming Ms.
Merrikhi’s election, NCRI President-elect Rajavi described this new development
as signaling the soon-to-come change of the theocratic ruling in Iran |
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