Communist Party of Spain (international) (1975)
Communist Party of Spain (international) | |
---|---|
Spanish name | Partido Comunista de España (Internacional) |
Catalan name | Partit Comunista d'Espanya (internacional) |
Founded | 1975 |
Headquarters | Barcelona |
Newspaper | Hoja informativa[1] |
Youth wing | Unión de Juventudes Marxistas Leninistas |
Ideology |
Communism Catalan independentism Antifascism Revolutionary Socialism |
Political position | Far-left |
Colors | Red |
Politics of Spain Political parties Elections |
The Communist Party of Spain (international) (Partido Comunista de España (Internacional) in Spanish language) was formed in 1975 after an split of the PCE(i)-Linea proletaria took again the name of PCE(i), used by the Spanish Labour Party until 1974. The PCE(i) defended the independence of the oppressed peoples of Spain, specially the Catalan one, from a working-class viewpoint. The PCE(i) had its main stronghold in Barcelona. The party was illegal for all of its existence, and defended urban guerrilla tactics.[2]
Ideology
Its ideological basis were Leninism and Maoism. The PCE(i) was in favor of low-intensity urban guerrilla, and was contrary to political reforms and defended the independence of Catalonia, the Canary Islands and the Balearic Islands.
They were always an illegal and underground organization. Its symbol in Catalonia was the red estelada.
History
The influence of the PCE(i) the streets of Barcelona was remarkable because of the riots produced in their demonstrations against riot police. The PCE(i) began to decline following the death of its (unarmed) member Gustau Muñoz, shot by the Spanish police during a demonstration in Barcelona in 1978.[3] The facts and the responsibilities of this death were never clarified. After this death numerous members of the party were arrested and imprisoned,[4] leaving the party in a very difficult situation. The same year another member of the party, Jordi Martínez de Foix i Llorenç, died while manipulating an manipulating an explosive device. Socors Català and other organizations said that they doubted the veracity of the official version. The public funeral of Jordi was banned.[5]
After 1978 the PCE(i) gradually disappeared by the arrest of most of its members and the dismantling of the party structures. Some members of the party were sentenced to long prison terms without specific reason. The party was never officially dissolved, but its generally considered to be totally disarticulated at the end of 1980. In 1983 a judge recognized that three members of the party arrested in Valladolid in 1980 had been tortured by the police. In 1985 the direction of the party (all of them in jail at the time) was absolved of unlawfull association and released.[6]
See also
- Balearic Anticolonialist Group
- Communist Party (British Section of the Third International)
- Communist Party (French Section of the Communist International) of the Region of Madagascar
- International Communist Party
- International Communist Party (Dominican Republic)
- Internationalist Communist Party
- Internationalist Communist Party (Battaglia Comunista)
References
- ↑ Some numbers.
- ↑ Juzgados por asociación ilegal siete presuntos ex dirigentes del PCEi.
- ↑
- ↑ Numerosos miembros del PCE (i), detenidos en Barcelona
- ↑ Prohibido el funeral por Martínez de Foix (PCE-i)» (en castellà). La Vanguardia, 1 de novembre 1978. Consulta: 1 setembre 2011
- ↑ Absueltos siete presuntos dirigentes del PCEi.