Wafa Movement
Wafa Movement حركة وفاء | |
---|---|
French name | Mouvement Wafa |
Secretary-General | Abderraouf Ayadi [1] |
Founded | 2012 (2012)[2] |
Split from | Congress for the Republic (CPR) |
Ideology | Secularism [1] Pan-Arabism |
Political position | Centre-left to left-wing [1] |
Assembly of the Representatives of the People | 0 / 217 |
Website | |
facebook | |
The Wafa Movement (Arabic: حركة وفاء), sometimes referred to as the Independent Democratic Congress, is a political party in Tunisia.
The party was founded in 2012 by a number of constituents who broke away from the Congress for the Republic (CPR). Led by the short-time CPR secretary-general Abderraouf Ayadi, the party however remained loosely allied with the governing Troika coalition of Ennahda, CPR and Ettakatol.
Generally seen as a secular, left-leaning party,[1] the Wafa Movement reached out to Islamists on the grounds of seeking unity among revolutionary forces. In the 2014 elections, the party lost its parliamentary representation.
History
[edit ]Formation
[edit ]On 19 April 2012, CPR secretary-general Abderraouf Ayadi had been dismissed from his official functions following controversies over Ayadis approval of Samir Geageas right-wing Lebanese Forces, a Christian militia responsible for the Sabra and Shatila massacre of hundreds of Palestinian refugees in 1982.[3]
A few days later, on 9 May 2012, Ayadi and a group of fellow constituents announced that they would leave the CPR to form a new party under the name of "Wafa",[4] meaning "faithful", used here in the sense of "faithful to the revolution". On July 25, the party was officially founded, "with the sole objective of realizing the revolution’s objectives: work, liberty and national dignity."[5]
Constituent Assembly
[edit ]In November 2012, the party announced it would sue Israel for the 1988 assassination of Fatah-official Abu Jihad by Sayeret Matkal Colonel Nahum Lev in Tunis. Wafa attorney Fadira Najjar considered the assassination a war crime under international law and claimed that deposed Tunisian president Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali as well as security officials colluded with Israel.[6]
In January 2013, secretary-general Ayadi supported the inscription of legal jihad into the Constitution of Tunisia. Allegedly he also advocated the integration of jihadist fighters into the Tunisian Army,[7] which however was immediately demented by Wafa party officials.[8] On 20 November 2013, Wafa president Abderraouf Ayadi proposed that a dialogue be started with militant Islamist group Ansar al-Sharia.[9]
2014 elections
[edit ]Having started with 12 parliamentarians in 2012, the Wafa Movement went into the 2014 parliamentary election with 10 seats,[10] all of which it lost receiving a mere 0.70% of the electoral vote. For the following presidential election, Wafa had already nominated its secretary-general Ayadi[10] who however withdrew his candidacy after the electoral results were published calling the election a "soft coup" with the comeback of old regime figures.[11] Wafa harshly criticized the candidacy of Beji Caid Essebsi, stating that he would have no place in a revolution of the youth against the former regime.[12] The party later supported the electoral campaign of interim president Moncef Marzouki.[13]
References
[edit ]- ^ a b c d "Wafa Movement / Independent Democratic Congress", Observatory on Politics and Elections in the Arab and Muslim World, retrieved 21 November 2013
- ^ "Tunisia's Second Largest Democratic Party Divides", The Maghreb Daily, 18 May 2013
- ^ "Tunisie/CPR: Le bureau politique limoge Abderraouf Ayadi". GlobalNet (in French). 2012年04月19日. Retrieved 2014年11月24日.
- ^ Hajbi, Nizar (2012年05月10日). "Fatale scission!". La Presse de Tunisie (in French). Archived from the original on 2012年05月17日.
- ^ Ben Cheikh, Lotfi (2012年06月08日). "El Wafa: "Fidèles à la Révolution"". MAG14 (in French). Archived from the original on June 12, 2012. Retrieved 2014年12月29日.
- ^ Miller, Elhanan (2012年11月05日). "Tunisian party sues Israel over Abu Jihad assassination". Times of Israel . Retrieved 2014年12月29日.
- ^ "Abderraouf Ayadi pour l'intégration des jihadistes au sein du ministère de la Défense!". Shems FM. 2013年01月28日. Retrieved 2014年12月29日.
- ^ "Tunisie – Wafa dément que Abderraouf Ayadi ait proposé d'intégrer les jihadistes dans l'armée nationale". Business News (in French). 2013年01月28日. Retrieved 2014年12月29日.
- ^ Smadhi, Asma (2013年11月21日). "Assembly Member Suggests Dialogue with Ansar al-Sharia". Tunisia Live. Retrieved 2013年11月21日.
- ^ a b Saidani, Monji (2014年06月30日). "Tunisian presidential candidates begin seeking endorsement". Asharq Al-Awsat . Retrieved 2014年12月29日.
- ^ Blioua, Imen (2014年11月19日). "Fifth Candidate Announces Withdrawal from Presidential Race". Tunisia Live. Retrieved 2014年12月29日.
- ^ "El-Sebsi's candidacy causes controversy in Tunisia". Middle East Monitor. 2014年09月10日. Retrieved 2014年12月29日.
- ^ "Wafa Movement backs Marzouki in presidential run-off". Tunis Afrique Presse. 2014年11月26日. Retrieved 2014年12月29日.