Comrades Party

Comrades Party
Leader Mustafa Fateh
Founded 1942
Newspaper Emruz va Farda
Ideology Socialism[1]
Political position Left-wing

The Comrades Party (Persian: حزب همرهان, translit. Hezb-e Hamrahān) was a left-wing Iranian political party active during the 1940s. The party was part of a wave of political groupings established in the early 1940s following the removal of Rezā Shāh.[2]

The party was formed in November 1942 by Mustafa Fateh, an economist who was close to the Tudeh Party of Iran but who disliked the close relationship which that party had with the Soviet Union.[3] Fateh, who had been an important figure in the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company edited the Tudeh paper Mardom for a time before establishing his own journal, Emruz va Farda.[3] Abbas Narraqi, another founding member had been one of 53 men imprisoned in 1937 on charges of conspiring to lead a communist revolution.[3]

The Comrades Party called for two main aims i.e. political equality to all Iranians and nationalisation of the means of production.[3] It put forward ten candidates in the 1944 election, all of whom came from professional backgrounds.[3] Two members of the Comrades Party were elected to the Majlis of Iran where they sat with the Individuals' Caucus, a group they made up along with the Iran Party and various independents, all of whom largely followed the lead of Mohammad Mosaddegh.[4]

The party split in 1944 following a dispute in Isfahan where clashes between striking workers and local tribes loyal to the Shah had broken out amid accusations that the workers were attempting to lead a communist revolution.[5] The Majlis-based wing of the Comrades Party condemned the workers and affirmed their loyalty to the Shah but another external group joined Tudeh in supporting the strikers and this group, which maintained control of Emruz va Farda, broke away to form the Socialist Party.[6]

References

  1. Najleh Khandagh (Winter 2010). "The Political Parties in Iran between 1941-1947, with particular emphasis on the Left- wings Parties" (PDF). Geopolitics Quarterly. Iranian Association of Geopolitics. 6 (4): 154–166.
  2. E. Burke Inlow, Shahansha, Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 1979, p. 214
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Ervand Abrahamian, Iran: Between Two Revolutions, Princeton University Press, 1982, p. 188
  4. Abrahamian, p. 202
  5. Abrahamian, p. 207
  6. Abrahamian, pp. 207-208
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.