Solidarity Party of Afghanistan

Solidarity Party of Afghanistan

حزب همبستگی افغانستان
Leader Dawood Razmak[1]
Founded 17 April 2004
Headquarters Kabul
Membership 30,000 (approx.)[2]
Ideology Secularism
Democratic socialism
Social democracy
Women's rights
Democratic reform
Anti-Imperialism
Left-wing nationalism
Political position Left-wing
Seats in the House of the People
0 / 249
Seats in the House of Elders
0 / 102
Website
hambastagi.org
Facebook

The Solidarity Party of Afghanistan (Persian: حزب همبستگی افغانستان) (SPA) is a small, left-wing political party in Afghanistan.[3] The party platform focuses on four main issues: secularism, women's rights, democracy, and opposition to the US/NATO presence in Afghanistan.[4] The party is strongly critical of the Afghan government, which it views as corrupt, fundamentalist, and dominated by warlords.[4] The party claims a membership of some 30,000.[4]

History

The party boycotted the 2005 and 2010 parliamentary elections.[3]

The party was suspended in June 2012 following a Kabul demonstration in late April 2012 where the party accused a number of Afghan leaders, including former leaders and commanders, of committing war crimes over the last three decades of conflict, and demanded they be brought to justice.[3]

The SPA boycotted the 2004, 2009, and 2014 Afghan Presidential elections as the party alleges that an individual cannot be elected without the approval of the US government.[4] The party does, however, take part in provincial elections as it believes these elections to be more democratic and harder for central government to control or rig.[4] No SPA members ran in the 2013 provincial elections, although the party did support certain candidates.[4]

References

  1. https://online.wsj.com/articles/islamic-states-siege-of-kobani-syria-sparks-protest-in-kabul-1413129298
  2. http://www.hambastagi.org/new/english-section/readers-column/661-interview-with-hafiz-rasikh-member-of-solidarity-party-of-afghanistan-on-upcoming-elections.html
  3. 1 2 3 "Afghanistan suspends political party sparking fears over freedom of speech | World news". The Guardian. Retrieved 2014-03-08.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Interview with Hafiz Rasikh, member of Solidarity Party of Afghanistan, on upcoming elections". Solidarity Party of Afghanistan/Osservatorio Afghanistan. 10 February 2014.
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