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Ittihad ash-Sha'ab
Ittihad ash-Sha'ab (, 'Unity of the People') was an Arabic-language daily newspaper published from Baghdad, Iraq. It was the main organ of the Iraqi Communist Party. Abd al-Qadir Isma'il al-Bustani was the editor-in-chief of the paper which had a circulation of 15,000.
The newspaper began circulating secretly sometime in 1956. After the minor splinter group of Daud as-Sayegh had been accorded the legal recognition of the name 'Iraqi Communist Party' in early 1960, the mainstream (and un-recognized) Iraqi Communist Party became informally known as the 'Ittihad ash-Sha'ab Party'. On 15 February 1960, the party sought legal recognition under the Associations Law under the name 'People's Unity Party' (i.e. Ittihad ash-Sha'ab Party), but this application was rejected by the Ministry of Interior.
During 1960, Ittihad ash-Sha'ab and other publications of the mainstream Communist Party were targeted by the Abd al-Karim Qasim government. In March 1960 Brigadier Sayyid Hamid Sayyid Hussein issued an order prohibiting the circulation of Ittihad ash-Sha'ab in seven districts of southern Iraq. On 30 September 1960 the newspaper was closed down for a period of ten months. Next month it was banned by the government.{{cite book|author=Manfred Halpern|editor1=Cyril E. Black|editor1-link=Cyril Edwin Black|editor2=Thomas P. Thornton|year=2015
References
References
- ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=0LooyExir7EC Middle East Record 1960]''. London: published for the Israel Oriental Society, the Reuven Shiloah Research Center. pp. xxvi, 230,239,240,243
- Al-Dulaimi, Abdulrazzaq. (2004). "الإعلام السري والعلني للأحزاب السياسية". Raed Global Library.
- "ICM's Tareeq Shaab information".
- From June 1960, distribution of ''Ittihad ash-Sha'ab'' was restricted in half of Iraq (including major cities) through security restrictions and harassment by police forces.Ismael, Tareq Y. (2008). ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=6uAvs4HqVLIC The Rise and Fall of the Communist Party of Iraq]''. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 100
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