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Mazdoor Kissan
Party
The Communist Party of
Pakistan was created in 1948 with Sajjad Zaheer as its
General Secretary. An unsuccessful attempt to overthrow
the government by anti-imperialist officers within the
army led to the incrimination of members of the CPP in
1951. This was known as the Rawalpindi Conspiracy Case.
This eventually led to a ban on the party and
its front organisations including the Democratic
Students Federation and the Progressive Writer’s
Movement, (headed by the world famous poet Faiz Ahmed
Faiz who along with Pablo Neruda won the Lenin peace
prize in 1962), Railway Worker’s Union (headed by the
leading communist trade unionist Mirza Ibrahim), and
Progressive Papers (a network of English and Urdu
newspapers set up by Mian Iftikharuddin) in 1954. The
Communist Party and the movement went underground.
In order to build up a mass base the CPP began
to operate under the cover of the anti-imperialist
National Awami Party (NAP) headed by Maulana Bhashani.
NAP was a conglomeration of leftist and regional
nationalist groups formed in 1957. During the 1960s the
CPP built grassroots support within workers and peasants
mass organisations.
The Sino-Soviet split
divided the Pakistani communist movement into two
groups. The Maoists who were critical of Soviet
revisionism formed the Mazdoor Kissan Party (MKP) in
1970 under the leadership of Major Ishaq Muhammed. The
MKP immediately launched a guerrilla war against
feudalism in the valley of Hashtnagar. The Peoples’ War
mobilised peasant control of land and its success had an
enormous impact upon the entire left in Pakistan. The
struggle in Hashtnagar that liberated an area of
approximately 200 square miles inspired similar
movements all over Pakistan. The pro-Soviet Communist
Party Pakistan began an armed peasant struggle in the
region of Patfeeder in Baluchistan and also came to
control mass based militant workers unions in the
cities. The 1970s were a revolutionary period in the
history of Pakistan and workers and peasants gained
control of major areas some of which remain bastions of
working-class power.
In 1977 a US backed
counter-revolutionary Marshal Law was declared
throughout the country and nearly the entire communist
leadership was picked up and jailed. The guiding force
of the MKP, Major Ishaq Muhammed, was jailed but refused
to compromise. He died in 1982 at the age of 62
succumbing to illnesses contracted during incarceration.
After his death, Ghulam Nabi Kalu, a popular communist
peasant leader headed the party.
Throughout the
1980’s the MKP and CPP displayed valour and courage in
the fight against the theocratic dictatorship of
Zia-ul-Haq. Hundreds of its activists were arrested and
tortured, but refused to bow their heads or submit to
the authority of the dictators.
In 1986 the MKP
condemned Gorbachev’s policies whereas the CPP continued
to support Glasnost and Perestroika. The MKP argued that
these policies would lead to the restoration of
capitalism in the Soviet Union. The break-up of the
Soviet Union had an enormous impact on the left in
Pakistan. A great number of opportunist factions
abandoned Marxism and the Communist movement. This was a
period of ideological wavering, confusion, desertion,
and international isolation. At this difficult juncture
in history the Communist Party of Pakistan and the
Mazdoor Kissan Party came together to uphold the banner
of Communism.
In 1995 both parties engaged in
criticism and self-criticism. Comrades of the CPP were
critical of their significant oversight of the impact of
Soviet revisionism. Comrades of the MKP were critical of
their significant deviation in characterising the Soviet
Union as soviet social imperialist. Both parties came
together in a historic union and formed the Communist
Mazdoor Kissan Party.
Emerging from over 54
years of struggle, the CMKP has been unwavering in its
defence of Marxism-Leninism and has upheld the
principles of Communism through many difficult periods.
As the world moves to the 21st century we are full of
enthusiasm and hope for a brighter socialist
future.
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