Feb 14, 2017

Iranian Kurdistan: Activists Launch Social Media Campaign to Declare IRGC a Terrorist Organisation


Photo Courtesy of Rudaw

Many Iranian Kurds have taken to twitter to call upon the international community to recognise Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a terrorist organisation, by using the hashtag “#IRGC_terrorist”. The campaign is aiming to capitalise on US President Donald Trump’s hardline attitude towards Iran, denouncing it as “#1 in terror”. The Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan’s Aso Saleh underlined that the IRGC has been brutally targeting Kurds shortly after its inception, but also has a far-reaching impact in its direct and indirect support for terrorist attacks against Iranian opposition groups around the world. Moreover, Saleh highlighted that the international community labelling the IRGC as a terrorist organisation may aid the Kurdish struggle. This social media campaign brought together different Kurdish parties as well as a myriad of Arab and Iranian activists, hopefully signalling the beginning of future cooperation. 

 

Below is an article published by Rudaw:

Iranian Kurds launched a social media campaign on Friday calling for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to be declared a terrorist organization. `

“It is time for international community to realise that IRGC is a terrorist organization,” Aso Saleh, representative of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI) to Sweden and the Congress of Nationalities for Federal Iran (CNFI), shared on Twitter, using the hashtag #IRGC_terrorist

The Kurds have been a long-time target of the IRGC, Saleh told Rudaw English, saying that the force began killing people in Kurdistan not long after it was established.

“I think all Kurds think that the IRGC forces are acting against humanism by killing civilian people and supporting other terrorist organisations in [the] whole the world,” Saleh said, claiming that the IRGC has had direct and indirect roles in hundreds of terrorist attacks against Iranian opposition groups and other countries. 

“We think that [it] is a correct decision to designate IRGC as a terror organization and by this campaign we want to support that. Stopping all kinds of terrorism, from ISIS to IRGC is a responsibility to all of us in this era.” 

Saleh is hopeful that, if the IRGC is designated a terrorist organization, it will make the Kurdish struggle in Iran more acceptable among the international community.

“But fighting against [the] Iranian regime and IRGC for us is like fighting ISIS. Both are terrorist organizations and both act against freedom and human rights.”

According to Saleh, this is the first campaign that has seen cooperation from across Kurdish parties, as well as Arab and Iranian activists. He is hopeful that the groups can continue to campaign together in the future.

Tweets in support of the campaign highlighted alleged acts of terrorism committed by the IRGC, including the assassinations of PDKI leaders.

The campaign is capitalizing on US President Donald Trump’s hardline stance against Iran. On February 7, Trump took to his favoured platform Twitter to declare Iran “#1 in terror” and criticize former US President Barack Obama for his landmark nuclear deal with Iran.

The PDKI’s representative to Germany and Austria, Hiwa Bahrami, reminded the US president of his own words.

Trump has repeatedly denounced the deal with Iran, calling it the “worst deal ever negotiated.”

The US imposed new sanctions against Iran last week after Tehran test-fired a ballistic missile in late January. Trump initially reacted on Twitter, telling Iran they were “playing with fire,” and warned he would not be as kind as Obama was.

On Thursday, CNN reported that Trump’s administration was considering designating the IRGC a terror organization, along with the Muslim Brotherhood.

Sources familiar with the White House’s consideration of the move told CNN that executive orders asking the State Department to study the groups were put on hold after national security agencies expressed concern about the potential consequences. 

The primary concern US security officials reportedly had with designating the IRGC a terror organization was fallout in Iraq, where Iran is a key ally of Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi in the war against ISIS. 

Iran is already designated a “state sponsor of terror” by the US, and its government and agencies, including the IRGC, are subject to sanctions. 

The Twitter campaign was launched as Tehran was celebrating the 38th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution. 

“In the United States, there are some who are newly in power. Those who threaten our government and our armed forces has to know that our people are united, vigilant and will resist the enemy until the end,” said President Hassan Rouhani, addressing a rally in Tehran on Friday.