Paraguayan Communist Party (independent)

Paraguayan Communist Party (independent) (in Spanish: Partido Comunista Paraguayo (independiente) is a communist political party in Paraguay. PCP(i) was founded in 1967 as a split from the Paraguayan Communist Party (PCP). Since the defeat of the guerrilla groups led by the party in 1963, opposition to Creydt in the PCP had grown. He was first criticised for his authoritarian behaviour and later for his anti-Cuban and pro-Chinese positions. He was deposed as secretary general in August 1965 and excluded from the party in 1967. His party faction first kept the same name as the pro-soviet faction but since 1973 “independent” was added to the party name. Many of the activities of the PCP(i) were directed against the PCP. The party was subjected to harsh repression by the regime of Alfredo Stroessner. It publishes “Unidad Paraguaya”. When Creydt died in 1987 the party was very week. When Stroessner fell in 1989 the party stayed in a semi-clandestinity.

Paraguayan Communist Party (independent)

Partido Comunista Paraguayo (independente)
AbbreviationPCP
FounderOscar Creydt
Founded1967
Legalised1989
Split fromParaguayan Communist Party
NewspaperUnidad Paraguaya
IdeologyCommunism
Marxism–Leninism
Maoism
Anti-Revisionism
Political positionFar-left
International affiliationICRPO

International elations

The PCP(i) was a pro-Chinese party. Creydt visited China in 1977 and 1980 and supported the political orientation of the post-Mao regime. He supported the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia against Vietnam in the war of 1979/1980. The PCP(i) today is a member party of the maoist/stalinist International Coordination of Revolutionary Parties and Organizations.

The maoist PCP and its successor the PCP(i) are sometimes called Paraguayan Communist Party (Marxist–Leninist)[1] or Communist Party of Paraguay[2].

Footnotes

  1. Hobday, Charles (1986). Communist and Marxist Parties of the World. Harlow: Longman Group. p. 369.
  2. Alexander, Robert J. (1999). International Maoism in the Developing World. Westport: Praeger Publishers. pp. 149–151.

References

  • Alexander, Robert J., Maoism in the Developing World, Praeger Publishers, Westport, 1999, p.149-151
  • Alexander, Robert J., Political Parties of the Americas, Canada, Latin America and the West Indies. Guadeloupe - Virgin Islands of the United States, Greenwood Press, Westport, 1982, p. 578-579
  • Akademie für Gesellschaftswissenschaften beim Zentralkomitee der SED, Institut für Imperialismusforschung, Institut für Internationale Arbeiterbewegung. Dokumentation. Die auf die heutige Pekinger Führung orientierten, die linksradikalen, die guerilleristischen Gruppen und die pseudolinken Terroristen-Gruppierungen in der kapitalistischen Welt. Ende der 70er/Anfang der 80er Jahre, October 1980 (Berlin), p. 213
  • Hobday, Charles, Communist and Marxist Parties of the World, Longman Group, Harlow 1986, p. 369
  • Lo Bianco, Miguel, Oscar Creydt. Luces y sombras, in: Pensamiento Crítico en el Paraguay. Memoria del Ciclo de Conversatorios 2014, BASE-IS, Asunción, 2014, p. 75-92
  • Nickson, Andrew, Oscar Creydt. Una biografía, El Lector, Asunción, 2011
  • Rosales, Humberto, Historia del Parido Comunista Paraguayo (1928 - 1990), 2009



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