April 12
— DUBAI (Reuters) - Iran's main rebel group, the People's
Mujahideen, said on Saturday 18 of its fighters were killed and 43
wounded in attacks by "Iranian agents" on their camps in Iraq last
week.
The Mujahideen, which seeks to overthrow Iran's Islamic
government, said several of its fighters were missing after the
attacks on the camps in northeast Iraq on April 10 and April 11.
"To carry out these terrorist attacks and schemes, the Ministry
of Intelligence dispatched a large number of its henchmen and agents
as well as a number of its Kurdish and Arabic-speaking operatives to
Iraq," the group said in a statement sent to Reuters in Dubai.
"Simultaneously, the clerical regime shelled a number of other
Mujahideen bases along the Iran-Iraq border with heavy artillery,"
the statement added.
Iranian officials were not immediately available to comment.
The rebel group had close ties to Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein's government and its bases in Iraq are considered enemy
targets by U.S.-led forces which have entered several Iraq cities
including the capital Baghdad.
Iran's Intelligence Minister Ali Yunesi said in remarks published
last week that Iran had no intention of attacking Mujahideen bases
in Iraq, as it has done in the past in retaliation for cross-border
attacks and bombings in Iran.
While publicly opposed to the U.S.-led attack on Iraq, Iran has
vowed to stay out of the conflict.
Iran has said that scores of Mujahideen rebels defected and
returned home in recent months under an amnesty offered by Tehran,
but the Mujahideen denied the report as "totally false."
Iraq's support for the Mujahideen and Iran's backing for Iraqi
Shi'ite Muslim dissidents has been a main obstacle to efforts by the
two neighbors to normalize ties after the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war.
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