http://arabnews.com/middleeast/article74079.ece

Iranian exiles demand tougher sanctions on Tehran
 
Supporters of the National Council of Resistance of Iran rally in Taverny, a 
northern suburb of Paris, on Saturday to push for regime change in Iran. (AP) 



By LAURENT HAMIDA | REUTERS 

Published: Jun 27, 2010 01:22 Updated: Jun 27, 2010 01:23 

PARIS: An Iranian exile group, backed by international politicians, said on 
Saturday that much stiffer sanctions would have to be imposed on Tehran if 
world powers hoped to curtail Iran's nuclear program.

Thousands supporters of the French-based National Council of Resistance of Iran 
(NCRI) filled a makeshift stadium just north of Paris to denounce Iranian 
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and demand more pressure be brought to bear on 
Tehran.

John Bolton, a former US ambassador to the United Nations, and former Spanish 
Prime Ministers Jose Maria Aznar, joined more than 100 lawmakers from across 
Europe, the Middle East and North America to voice their opposition to 
Ahmadinejad.

"The international community lost a very important opportunity a year ago when 
they did not give strong support to the freedom fighters in the Iranian 
streets," Aznar said, referring to protests that followed Ahmadinejad's 2009 
election.

"And now we continue to approve sanctions that I consider are not enough." he 
told Reuters.

The UN Security Council voted earlier this month for a fourth round of 
sanctions aimed at curbing Iran's nuclear program which the West fears could 
lead to an Atomic weapon - something Tehran denies.

Bolton said the UN move was not aggressive enough. "I don`t think sanctions 
will prevent this regime from obtaining nuclear weapons," he told Reuters.

A NCRI spokesman said some 1,000 buses had ferried its supporters to the rally, 
adding that "many tens of thousands" had shown up. There was no independent 
estimate of crowd numbers.

The NCRI has followers across Europe and the United States and was the first 
group to expose Iran's covert nuclear program in 2002. It claims to have huge 
backing within Iran although analysts say its support is very hard to gauge.

NCRI leader Maryam Rajavi told the rally that to change ideas in Tehran, the 
world had to get rid of the current rulers.

"From our point of view, the new Security Council resolution and complementary 
sanctions by the US and Europe are necessary, but insufficient ... We demand 
that you stop the purchase of oil and gas from this regime right now," she said.

"The Iranian people, of course, demand far more than this. They demand that 
this regime must go," she added.

The NCRI is the political wing of the People's Mujahideen Organization of Iran 
(PMOI), based in Iraq, an armed guerrilla movement listed as a terrorist group 
by the United States.

Europe removed the group from its own terrorist blacklist last year, but Rajavi 
has said much of its bank accounts are still frozen.

"We demand that all restrictions that have been imposed on the Iranian 
Resistance in Europe and the United States be lifted," she said.


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