Jordan Communist Party
Jordan Communist Party
(JCP, Hizb al-Shuyu’i al-Urdunni), founded illegally Nov. 25,1943 (until September 1951 the National Liberation League).
In 1951 the Jordan Communist Party adopted a program setting as its goals the elimination of imperialist domination and feudalism and the creation of a national democratic system in Jordan. In 1954, at the initiative of the party, which was given an opportunity at this time to legalize its activities, the National Front of patriotic and anti-imperialist forces was organized. The JCP won two seats in Parliament on the Front’s ticket in 1956.
As a result of a reactionary coup in 1957 the JCP was banned and subjected to severely repressive measures. After the Israeli aggression of 1967 the Jordanian government, seeking the support of all patriotic forces, granted amnesty to the Jordanian Communists. However, the party was not legalized, and it was forced to operate only semilegally. In August 1967 the JCP adopted an extraordinary program putting forth as its basic task the mobilization of patriotic anti-imperialist forces in the struggle to settle problems left in the wake of the Israeli aggression and the creation of a broad national front.
The JCP supports a settlement of the Middle East crisis according to the United Nations resolutions. Delegations of the JCP took part in the Conferences of Representatives of Communist and Workers’ Parties of 1957, 1960, and 1969 in Moscow and endorsed the documents adopted by these conferences. The first secretary of the Central Committee of the Jordan Communist Party is Fuad Nassar.