Katyusha rockets fired on a camp housing Iranian dissidents near Baghdad have killed five members of the opposition group, Iraqi security officials say.
About 40 members of the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (MEK) group were wounded in Saturday’s attack, along with three Iraqi policemen.
MEK calls for the overthrow of Iran’s leaders and fought alongside the forces of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein in the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack on the transit camp, a former American military base known as Camp Liberty, adjacent to Baghdad’s international airport.
“At 5:30am around 18 Katyusha rockets landed in the camp, west of Baghdad, killing five people and wounding 42,” an Iraqi policeman at the base said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
A spokesman for the interior ministry, however, said only one person had been killed and that reports of more deaths were “exaggerated’.
UN urges investigation: The United Nations called on Iraqi authorities to “promptly conduct an investigation” and said its monitors on the ground were following up on the deaths, the first confirmed fatalities as a result of violence at the group’s new camp since they moved there last year.
Eliana Nabaa, spokeswoman for the UN mission in Iraq, said Iraqi officials had told the UN that “all those who were injured were hospitalised immediately”.
The MEK, whose leadership is based in Paris, said in a statement that six people were killed and 50 wounded.
The group provided amateur video and photos it said showed the aftermath of the attack. One photo showed six bodies swaddled in blankets lying on the ground in a hallway.
Amateur video showed wounded, some with blood-covered faces, being treated at a small clinic.
A spokesman for the MEK said they did not know for sure who was behind the attack, but said one likely suspect was Iran’s Quds force – an elite unit of the Revolutionary Guards with a special focus on military operations outside the country.
Camp Liberty is home to more than 1,000 residents from the MEK who were moved last year, on Iraq’s insistence, from their historic paramilitary camp of the 1980s – Camp Ashraf.
The MEK was founded in the 1960s to oppose the Shah of Iran, and after the 1979 Islamic revolution that overthrew him it took up arms against Iran’s theocratic rulers. It says it has now laid down its arms and is working to overthrow the government in Tehran through peaceful means. It is no longer welcome in Iraq under the Shia-led government that came to power after US-led forces invaded and toppled Saddam in 2003.