Nabiyan National Liberation Front: Difference between revisions
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|rowspan=2|[[File: | |rowspan=2|[[File:Rash Behari Bose 02.jpg|80px]] | ||
|rowspan=2|'''Shyam Pandit'''<br>(1873-1967) | |rowspan=2|'''Shyam Pandit'''<br>(1873-1967) | ||
|2 August 1941 | |2 August 1941 | ||
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|style="background:#000000; color:white;"|Nationalist | |style="background:#000000; color:white;"|Nationalist | ||
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|colspan=5 align=left| {{small|Shyam Pandit took over leadership of the Nationalist Party and the National Liberation Front following the death of Rajavade. Pandit held the leadership of the front for a total of 196 days until the Nationalists 4 year term expired. Pandit continued the hard-line approach of his predicessor, working with Songha forces to fight for Nabiyan independence. Pandit would | |colspan=5 align=left| {{small|Shyam Pandit took over leadership of the Nationalist Party and the National Liberation Front following the death of Rajavade. Pandit held the leadership of the front for a total of 196 days until the Nationalists 4 year term expired. Pandit continued the hard-line approach of his predicessor, working with Songha forces to fight for Nabiyan independence. Pandit would remain leader of the Nationalist party until he officially left the NLF in 1951.}} | ||
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|rowspan=2| | |rowspan=2|[[File:Bihar Vibhuti Dr Anugrah Narayan Sinha,first Bihar Dy Chief Minister.jpg|80px]] | ||
|rowspan=2|'''Satish Dagade'''<br>(1894-1957) | |rowspan=2|'''Satish Dagade'''<br>(1894-1957) | ||
|14 February 1946 | |14 February 1946 | ||
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|style="background:red; color:white;"|Communist | |style="background:red; color:white;"|Communist | ||
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|colspan=5 align=left| {{small|}} | |colspan=5 align=left| {{small|Satish Dagade was the first Communist leader of the NLF and the leader of the organisation throughout much of the Nabiyan Civil War. Dagade's leadership was controversial throughout the NLF due to his tenture overseeing a wide degree of entryists joining the front, leading to widespread Communist control of the front's administrative organs. Nevertheless, Dagade was also controversial within the Communist party itself due to his compromising attitude towards leadership with the other factions. In the aftermath of the NLF's defeat during the civil war, the front was forced underground leading to a significant exodus from the front.}} | ||
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|rowspan=2| | |rowspan=2|[[File:Shah Nawaz Khan.jpg|80px]] | ||
|rowspan=2|'''Rohit Gadkari'''<br>(1886-1953) | |rowspan=2|'''Rohit Gadkari'''<br>(1886-1953) | ||
|14 February 1950 | |14 February 1950 | ||
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|style="background:black; color:white;"|Nationalist | |style="background:black; color:white;"|Nationalist | ||
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|colspan=5 align=left| {{small|}} | |colspan=5 align=left| {{small|Rohit Gadkari was the final Nationalist leader of the NLF. Gadkari's leadership saw the NLF attempt to reorganise to wage a guerilla campaign against the new Senapati government. Gadkari's tenture was wrought with division in the NLF due to a mass exodus of Nationalists, some of whom were supportive of the new government and the rising influence of the Communists. Gadkari would be forced to contest re-election as NLF leader in 1952 due to constitutional changes which abolished the rotating presidency. Gadkari lost the subsequent election to Anjal Vyas. Under the Vyas regime Gadkari would be caught up in the purge of remaining Nationalist and Republican members and would be tried and executed for treason the following year.}} | ||
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|rowspan=2| | |rowspan=2|[[File:Kalicharan Banurji.jpg|80px]] | ||
|rowspan=2|'''Anjal Vyas'''<br>(1887-1973) | |rowspan=2|'''Anjal Vyas'''<br>(1887-1973) | ||
|6 April 1952 | |6 April 1952 | ||
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|style="background:red; color:white;"|Communist | |style="background:red; color:white;"|Communist | ||
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|colspan=5 align=left| {{small|}} | |colspan=5 align=left| {{small|Anjal Vyas was leader of the NLF from 1952 to 1960. His leadership was integral to the reformation of both the Nabiyan Communist Party and the NLF. Vyas promoted a philosophy of continued revolution which advocated using guerilla tactics to continue the civil war whilst reforming the NLF into a parallel state to the Senapati governmnent. Vyas's approach would define the party from the 1950s until the late 1980s when the NLF was at the height of its power. Vyas would not contend the 1960 election, stepping down as leader to be replaced by Madhev Sane.}} | ||
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Revision as of 00:29, 1 August 2024
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Nabiyan National Liberation Front नबियान नॅशनल लिबरेशन फ्रंट Nabiyāna nĕśanala libarēśana phraṇṭa | |
---|---|
Leader | Ravi Goyal |
Deputy Leader | Alia Bhagat |
Founded | 1934 |
Ideology | Revolutionary Socialism Anarchism Dhamdherism |
Political position | Far-left |
The Nabiyan National Liberation Front (Thrakur: नबियान नॅशनल लिबरेशन फ्रंट, Nabiyāna nĕśanala libarēśana phraṇṭa) or simply the NLF, is a revolutionary, socialist political party and rebel group operating within Nabiya. Formed by 1934 as a union of the Nabiyan Communist, Nationalist and Republican parties as an attempt to fight for Nabiyan independence against Rythene and Tyrnica the group has since evolved into a anarcho-socialist revolutionary group occupying areas of southern Nabiya and current engaged in an on-and-off conflict against the Senapati-led government of the Arani Empire.
Organisation
History
Ideology
Administration
Leaders
The Leadership of the National Liberation Front has evolved over time with the type of leadership and method of election changing based on amendments to the party's constitution. Originally, the NLF had no designating leader and instead operated with a leadership council made up of all three independent party leaders. Each leader would share authority over the group with any decisions or amendments to the party's constitution requiring unanimous agreement between all three.
As the independence struggle deepened however this proved unworkable leading the constitution to be amended to include a rotating presidency. Under this system the President of the NLF would serve a 4-year term which would rotate between candidates from the Nationalist Party, Nabiyan Republican Party and Communist Party of Nabiya. This system of a rotating presidency existed between 1938 and 1952 when it was replaced by a system of election by committee from all parties in the coalition without any system of rotation. This amendment greatly benefitted the Communist party which by this point had gained almost complete control over the party committee and membership due to entryist tactics which largely displaced the influence of the Nationalist and Republican groups. Under the current system, the party presidency has evolved from periods of almost dictatorial control during the 1970s and 80s, to the more democratic system seen under the modern anarcho-socialist party today.