Saturday, June 13, 2015

Iran-Iranian opposition group leader says Iran regime 'cannot be trusted'

Iran-Iranian opposition group leader says Iran regime 'cannot be trusted'

Maryam Rajavi Iranian opposition group leader
 Iranian opposition leader: Mullahs are masters of deception
 The leader of the largest Iranian opposition group says the country’s current regime “cannot and should not be trusted” and is calling on the U.S. and world powers to recognize Iran's intentions in advance of the deadline on the interim nuclear framework agreement, that comes at the end of this month.
 For her part,Mis. Rajavi told Fox News that she believes the same forces that have toppled brutal dictatorships elsewhere will also free the Iranian people.

"We seek an Iran where tolerance replaces intolerance. Love, friendship, forgiveness and compassion will replace hatred, animosity, and brutality. An Iran where women will be free to wear what they like, to study what they like and to engage in any activity they wish. An Iran with gender equality. An Iran where all religious and ethnic minorities will be free and enjoy the same rights as the rest of the people. Just as the late Dr. Martin Luther King spoke of his dream for America, I have a dream for Iran, this is not just a dream. I am confident that Iran will be free soon. Change in Iran is inevitable, because we, the people of Iran, are determined to bring regime change and establish democracy."

Despite more than three decades of struggle, she remains hopeful.

"The movement is seeking a democratic and non-nuclear Iran, with separation of religion and state, gender equality and regional an international coexistence," she

Iranian diaspora prepare for annual gathering


Iranian diaspora prepare for annual gathering

The great Iranian gathering in Paris in 2014 supporters of Maryam Rajavi
 As the June 30 deadline approaches for a comprehensive agreement on the Iranian regime’s nuclear program, Iranian people abroad are to show up in their annual grand gathering in the Villepinte Hall in Paris on June 13, 2015.
  Maryam Rajavi , president-elect of National Council of Resistance of Iran ( NCRI ), will be the keynote speaker of this grand gathering. She will talk about the ongoing situation in Iran, Iran’s nuclear activity for procuring atomic bombs, and threat of fundamentalism in the Middle East and its solution.
 To date, many international dignitaries from the U.S, Europe and Arab countries have voiced support for this gathering. Arab communities including Syrian and Palestinian people will also take part in this gathering, which will address the tangible threat of fundamentalism and sectarianism that is entangling the Middle East.
Last year, 600 political dignitaries, legislators and jurists from a wide spectrum of political tendencies participated in the gathering alongside with 100,000 Iranian people from four corner of the world.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

"Circumstances are ripe for regime change in Iran" says Maryam Rajavi

 "Circumstances are ripe for regime change in Iran" says Maryam Rajavi, the president of the National Council of Resistance of Iran

Maryam Rajavi; Circumstances are ripe for regime change in Iran

Freedom in Iran is “completely attainable,” Maryam Rajavi said ahead of a major opposition rally in Paris.
 'The failure to prevent the Iranian regime’s meddling in Iraq after the 2003 Iraq War, which morphed into the gradual occupation of Iraq by the Iranian regime, gave an unprecedented boost to the growth of fundamentalism,' she added. 'Similarly, the [Khamenei] regime’s crimes in Syria and Iraq and the genocide against Sunnis, which is accompanied by Western silence, have enabled the rise of [the Islamic State].'
The Times quoted Mrs. Rajavi as saying, 'We want a pluralist system, freedom of parties and assembly,' she said. 'We respect all individual freedoms [and] we underscore complete freedom of expression and the media and unconditional access by all to the Internet.
'This is something that is completely attainable in Iran,' said Mrs. Rajavi, who accused Western powers of 'standing against the Iranian people’s will.'