First, I'm grateful to the committee and the subcommittee for hearing me on this issue.
Obviously, I don't know what proceedings you've had with respect to Ashraf up until now, but I will begin by stating that there are approximately 3,400 women and men in Camp Ashraf. They are Iranians, members of an organization called MEK, Mujahideen-e-Khalq, who are opposed to the current Iranian regime and have opposed it consistently. MEK favours a democratic, secular, non-nuclear Iran, and their members have been persecuted, killed, and imprisoned under the current regime.
They are living in a camp in Iraq called Ashraf. They said they fled Iran. They are living in that camp, and they are now under a deadline of December 31 imposed by the Iraqi government, acting quite obviously at the behest of the Government of Iran. That deadline is to either send them back to Iran, relocate them to other countries, or relocate them elsewhere in Iraq.
Although they have been designated by the UNHCR as asylum seekers, the Iraqi government has interfered with the ability of officials to get into the camp and interview them individually to find out their eligibility for refugee status, and so they are in a kind of limbo.
The camp has been attacked twice by Iraqi troops within the last two years, once in 2009 and once in April of this year. They shot people in cold blood. There is a tape made from various telephone camera transmissions from within the camp. It's a shocking scene. It shows Iraqi troops shooting these folks, women and men, in cold blood, running them down with military vehicles. They are unarmed. They had weapons to defend themselves, but they voluntarily surrendered them in 2003 when the coalition invaded Iraq. They received a written guarantee from a U.S. general acting on behalf of the coalition that they would be treated as protected persons under the Geneva Conventions. They were then screened individually by representatives of the FBI and the Justice Department of the United States, both of which found that none of them had any terrorist background or leanings.
Although the EU had them on a list of terrorist organizations for a while, it has taken them off. The United Kingdom has done the same. Unfortunately, though, the United States continues to list them as a terrorist organization. That listing has been challenged in court. A United States court has told the State Department that the public record does not contain enough evidence to consider them a terrorist organization. Nevertheless, the State Department hasn't acted to remove them from their list.
What is urgent now is that they are facing this December 31 deadline, after which the Iraqi government has made it clear that they will do again what they did back in 2009 and in April of this year, which is to go in there with troops and kill people wholesale. Either that or they will redistribute them within Iraq to locations where they can be disposed of out of sight of the international community.
I and others who have come to recognize this problem have taken up their cause. We have been trying to get governments everywhere to recognize the crisis and to act. Sympathizers include many former officials of the United States government, such as Louis Freeh, the former head of the FBI; Tom Ridge, the first Secretary of Homeland Security and the former Governor of Pennsylvania; and two former directors of the CIA.
The December 31 deadline is entirely arbitrary. It is certainly not based on anything the residents of Ashraf have done or intend to do, but has simply been imposed by the Iraqi government.
I can stop or pause here if you like and simply take questions, which might help flesh out the situation. It will allow me to not talk about things you already know.