and 2013 at Camp Ashraf , which includes Iranian dissidents in Iraq .

A decision cited by Madrid central Court dated 21 of November said that Faleh al-Fayad will be subject to investigation in “supposed crimes against the international community” as the head of " Ashraf Committee " affiliated to the Prime Minister .

This investigation comes after a lawsuit filed against Fayad “as a person responsible for serious violations of the Fourth Geneva Convention and his supposed involvement in the massacres of 8 of April, 2011 and the first of September 2013 against people protected by the Fourth Geneva Convention and reside in Camp Ashraf.”

Judge Fernando Andrew, supervisor on the file decided in January 2011 to investigate the acts of violence committed by soldiers and Iraqi policemen at Camp Ashraf, in which Iranian dissidents live north of Baghdad where 11 people were killed in 2009.

The judge relied on accusations filed by the relatives of the victims, who also accused Prime Minister, Nuri al-Maliki of involvement in those events, but the Spanish judge confirmed that the latter “enjoys immunity.”

The United Nations has recognized that 52 residents of Ashraf were killed in the attack of the first of September 2013 , some shot in the head while they were handcuffed .

The Spanish judiciary cited "Seven other protected people were kidnapped during the attack without releasing them so far."