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Communist Unity (MarxistâLeninist) ( Icelandic: Einingarsamtök kommĂșnista (marx-lenĂnistar)) was an Icelandic Maoist Party formed in the late 1973, mainly by Icelandic students who had studied in Norway. The party viciously opposed what it deemed Soviet social-imperialism as well as American imperialism, opposed other Icelandic communist parties which it found to be revisionist and held a staunchly pro-China line, until the Sino-Albanian split, when it sided with Albania. The party's chairman was Ari Trausti GuĂ°mundsson.
In 1979 the party was integrated into the Communist Union (KommĂșnistasamtökin) together with the other Icelandic Maoist party, the Communist Party of Iceland (MarxistâLeninist) (KommĂșnistaflokkur Ăslands (m-l)).
From 1975 to 1985 Communist Unity published the newspaper VerkalĂœĂ°sblaĂ°iĂ° (the working people's paper).
The party maintained fraternal relations with Workers' Communist Party (Norway), Communist Party of Germany/MarxistsâLeninists, [1] MarxistâLeninist League of Denmark, Communist Party of Sweden, [2] amongst other parties.
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (May 2010) |
Part of a series on |
Nordic M-L Movement |
---|
Organisations |
Denmark:
KAP |
Personalities |
Nils Holmberg |
Ideologies |
Maoism |
Communism Portal |
Communist Unity (MarxistâLeninist) ( Icelandic: Einingarsamtök kommĂșnista (marx-lenĂnistar)) was an Icelandic Maoist Party formed in the late 1973, mainly by Icelandic students who had studied in Norway. The party viciously opposed what it deemed Soviet social-imperialism as well as American imperialism, opposed other Icelandic communist parties which it found to be revisionist and held a staunchly pro-China line, until the Sino-Albanian split, when it sided with Albania. The party's chairman was Ari Trausti GuĂ°mundsson.
In 1979 the party was integrated into the Communist Union (KommĂșnistasamtökin) together with the other Icelandic Maoist party, the Communist Party of Iceland (MarxistâLeninist) (KommĂșnistaflokkur Ăslands (m-l)).
From 1975 to 1985 Communist Unity published the newspaper VerkalĂœĂ°sblaĂ°iĂ° (the working people's paper).
The party maintained fraternal relations with Workers' Communist Party (Norway), Communist Party of Germany/MarxistsâLeninists, [1] MarxistâLeninist League of Denmark, Communist Party of Sweden, [2] amongst other parties.