Iraqi Communist Party

The Iraqi Communist Party (Arabic: الحزب الشيوعي العراقي al-ḥizb aš-šiyūʿī al-ʿirāqī; Kurdish: حیزبی شیووعیی عێراقی, romanized: ḥizbī šiyūʿītē ʿirāqī) is a communist party and the oldest active party in Iraq. Since its foundation in 1934, it has dominated the left in Iraqi politics. It played a prominent role in shaping the political history of Iraq between its foundation and the 1970s. The Party was involved in many of the most important national uprisings and demonstrations of the 1940s and 1950s. It suffered heavily under the Ba'ath Party and Saddam Hussein but remained an important element of the Iraqi opposition and was a vocal opponent of the United Nations sanctions imposed on Iraq after the Gulf War of 1991. It opposed the United States invasion of Iraq in 2003 but since then has participated in the new political institutions. It received little support in the Iraqi general elections of 2005. The party gained some seats in each province in which the 2013 Iraqi governorate elections were held.

Iraqi Communist Party
الحزب الشيوعي العراقي
AbbreviationICP (حشع)
LeaderRaid Fahmi
Founded31 March 1934 (31 March 1934)
HeadquartersAl Nithal Street, Baghdad
NewspaperAl-Qaidah
The Spark (الشرارة)
Path of the People (طريق الشعب)
Youth wingIraqi Democratic Youth Federation
Paramilitary wingAl-Ansar (Iraq)
IdeologyCommunism
Classical Marxism
Reformism
Secularism
Nonsectarianism
Political positionLeft-wing
National affiliationNational Union Front
(1954–1958)
National Progressive Front
(1974–1979)
People's Union
(2005–2010)
Civil Democratic Alliance
(2013–2018)
Alliance Towards Reforms (Saairun) (2018–2022)
International affiliationIMCWP
Colors    Red and White
Slogan"A free homeland and a happy people"
(وطن حر وشعب سعيد)
Council of Representatives
0 / 329
Party flag
Website
iraqicp.com

The party joined the newly established Sairoun Alliance in the 2018 parliamentary elections, who gained the highest number of votes and a total of 54 seats in the Iraqi parliament. A communist woman representing the alliance, Suhad al-Khateeb, was also elected in the elections to represent the city of Najaf, deemed to be one of the holiest religious and conservative cities in Iraq. Al-Khateeb, who is a teacher and an anti-poverty and women's rights activist, said upon her victory "the Communist party have a long history of honesty – we were not agents for foreign occupations. We want social justice, citizenship, and are against sectarianism, and this is also what Iraqis want."

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.