Sudanese Communist Party


The Sudanese Communist Party is a communist party in the Republic of the Sudan. Founded in 1946, it was a major force in Sudanese politics and one of the two most influential communist parties in the Arab world. In 1971, President Gaafar Nimeiry launched a wave of repression against the party after a failed coup implicated the involvement of some communist military officers. The party's best known leaders; Abdel Khaliq Mahjub, Joseph Garang, Alshafi Ahmed Elshikh, Babkir Elnour and Hashem al Atta were executed and the party was officially banned, but some SCP politicians did manage to enter the government.
It was one of the main opposition parties to Omar al-Bashir's regime, and is currently in opposition to Abdel Fattah al-Burhan's Transitional Military Council and the measures enacted by the 2019 Sudanese coup d'état.

History

Foundation and growth

The party began as an offshoot of the Egyptian Communist movement. Individual communists influenced by the Egyptian Communist Party were active in the Sudan prior to World War Two. The first formal communist organisation in the Sudan, and the forerunner of the Sudanese Communist Party, the Sudan Movement for National Liberation, was founded in 1946. During the 1940s and 1950s the party became popular amongst students, helping found the Students Congress in 1949. The SCP originally worked largely through different front organisations, such as Democratic Front, founded in 1954, and contested elections through the Anti-Imperialist Front.
The party joined with other groups opposed to the government of Ibrahim Abboud, and played a key role in toppling the government in the 1964 October Revolution, joining the subsequent transitional government.
The party contested elections in the 1960s, although came into conflict with the Umma Party and NUP led government. Nevertheless, the party went on to win 8 seats at the 1965 election, with Ahmad Sulayman being elected from a territorial constituency, and Abdel Khaliq Mahjub being elected as an independent. Another member of the party, Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim, was the first woman elected to the Sudanese parliament.
The party suffered a split in late 1964/early 1965 in reaction to the Sino-Soviet split, with certain members either being expelled or voluntarily leaving to form the pro-Chinese Sudanese Communist Party – Revolutionary Leadership.
From 1965 to 1967 there was constitutional controversy as other parties tried to outlaw the SCP from partaking in parliamentary elections. Some members advocating the establishment of an ideologically broader Socialist Party of the Sudan, which survived from 1967 to 1969. Other members advocated operating underground.

Nimeiry government and repression

On May 25, 1969 the Sudanese government was overthrow in a military coup led by Gaafar Nimeiry. The SCP gained influence with the new administration, and SCP policies, such as those pertaining to regional autonomy for the South were adopted by the government. Joseph Garang, an SCP member, was made the Government Minister of Southern Affairs. The SCP plan was open to the later adopted Addis Ababa Agreement, although Garang was executed for his role in the SCP led 1971 Sudanese coup d'état.
The failed 1971 coup had its roots in historic ideological differences within the party; between the Pro-Soviet faction, and the Nationalist faction. The nationalists, such as Ahmad Sulayman and Farouk Abu Issa, wished to cooperate with the new Sudanese government. The Pro-Soviet faction, led by Abdel Khaliq Mahjub, was less supportive, and Mahjub was arrested and exiled in 1970. In 1971 pro-Communist military officers tried unsuccessful to overthrow the Nimeiry led government. Following the failed coup Mahjub, other SCP leaders, and the dissident officers were executed, and the party organisation was harshly repressed.

Post-Nimeiry

In 1985 Abdel Rahman Swar al-Dahab launched a coup d'état, overthrowing Nimeiry. In this new climate the SCP, now led by Muhammad Ibrahim Nugud, resumed its former activities and took part in the 1986 election, winning 3 seats, and returning Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim to the National Assembly.
Following the 1989 Sudanese coup d'état however the party was again repressed, with the party being banned and its leaders being arrested.

Recent developments

As of 2006, the SCP is led by Muhammad Ibrahim Nugud and plays only a marginal role. Nugud however claims the party enjoys support from a wide section of Sudanese society, including "workers, farmers, students, women's groups, minority groups, in the Nuba Mountains, in the South, and in Darfur". Human rights activist Suleman Hamid El Haj is the assistant secretary and spokesman for the party. After the independence of South Sudan in 2011, the southern branch of the party split to form the Communist Party of South Sudan.
The SCP and South African Communist Party recently jointly launched the African Left Network meeting in order to facilitate greater cooperation amongst African Communist parties.

Ideology

Historic

During the Cold War the party developed two main wings; an Orthodox Marxist and Pro-Soviet wing led by Abdel Khaliq Mahjub, and a Nationalist wing emphasizing a more localized Sudanese interpretation of Marxism led by Ahmad Sulayman and Farouk Abu Issa.
The party previously supported the policies and positions of the SPLM in the early 1990s.

Current

The SCP advocated a return to democratic rule and opposed the secession of South Sudan. The freer political climate has allowed the party to be more active since the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement. Party leader Muhammad Ibrahim Nugud came out of two decades of hiding. Party members suffering during the decades of NIF rule had pleaded with him to be more active but Nugud feared arrest. Nugud visited Juba, Southern Sudan, on 28 November 2008 for the first time in two decades at the invitation of Southern communists. The trip was aimed at “bolstering the activities of the SCP in southern Sudan”. He was received by SPLM Deputy Secretary-General, Dr. Ann Itto.
The party participated in the events of the 2018–19 Sudanese protests and is in opposition to the measures enacted by the Transitional Military Council in the aftermath of the 2019 Sudanese coup d'état.

List of party leaders

Sudanese parliamentary elections