Mabifian Democratic Republic

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Mabifian Democratic Republic
République démocratique mabifienne
1943–1978
Flag of Mabifia
Flag
Emblem of Mabifia
Emblem
Motto: "Brisez les chaines, ouvriers baïens!"
"Break the chains, Bahian workers!"
Anthem: Main dans la main
Hand in hand
MediaPlayer.png
CapitalOuagedji (1943-1958)
Gollobesare (1958-1978)
Common languagesGaullican (official)
Religion
State atheism
Demonym(s)Mabifian
GovernmentSocialist council republic
• 1943-1950
Léopold Giengs
• 1950-1972
Pierre-Julien Onziema
• 1972-1978
Soleïman Keïta
Historical eraGreat Game
1942
• Established
1943
1942-1943
• Declaration of the Democratic Republic
13 May 1943
5 October 1968-25 March 1969
1972-1978
• Disestablished
1978
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Estmerish Mandate of Southern Bahia
Mabifia
Today part ofDewral

The Mabifian Democratic Republic (Gaullican: République démocratique mabifienne) was a socialist state located in Bahia, which would become the Republic of Mabifia. The Mabifian Democratic Republic was established in 1943, following the victory of the Popular Liberation Movement in the First Mabifian Civil War. In 1972 it fell into the Second Mabifian Civil War; by 1978 the regime lost the capital Gollobesare and the President, Soleïman Keïta, fled the country, marking the MDR's end.

History

Léopold Giengs parades through the streets of Ouagedji following the victory of the Popular Liberation Front.

With the conclusion of the civil war, the MSWI-led Popular Liberation Front took complete power. However, the effects of the civil war had left Mabifia devastated. Economic infrastructure such as roads and railways had been targetted by all parties, while mines and oil extraction infrastructure had been largely abandoned or damaged. To compound this problem, the flight of the colonial elite and much of the indigenous Bahian middle class both during the conflict and at the victory of the socialists had left a major skills shortage. Léopold Giengs, the first State President, faced a difficult task in restarting the nation's economy. He opted to seek help from abroad, inviting specialists from Valduvia and Chistovodia to the country in order to train local technicians. Farmlands which had been owned by Gaullicans, as well as those owned by local elites who had fled during the civil war, were seized by the state to be run through collective farming. Land was distributed to local communities in order to be run by localised councils called 'foujodes', which would in principle give every peasant land, housing and food to support themselves.

The difficulty of moving Mabifia towards a socialist society as envisaged by the more ideologically purist wing of the MSWI was quickly evident, however. The population were largely illiterate and dependent on subsistence agriculture, with the fledgling industrial base created by the colonial administration in ruins. Giengs, a member of the more pragmatic wing of the party, quickly realised that the popular support for the socialists had been in their promise of land for all and an end to oppressive landowners as opposed to the promise of an industrialised classless society and opted to focus on this rural base as a means of consolidating the MDR's hold on the country. A member of the Mirite minority, Giengs was unable to anchor his support upon the loyalties of an ethnic group and this forced him to take a highly cautious approach to administrating the country. Giengs took a lenient stance towards many elements of traditional Bahian society, aware that any strong repression of religious groups could destabilise the young state. However, Mabifia under Giengs was anything but free and Giengs presided over the creation of the Agence nationale pour la Défense de la Révolution, which was responsible for the suppression of all political opposition to the socialist government. Another key area of development was education, which was seen as a key element of ensuring successful socialism in Mabifia. Schools were constructed across the country, as well as universities at Ouagedji and Kangesare. These schools were tasked with "forming a revolutionary generation", and the content of their classes was highly politically motivated. Children were taught to love the party more than their own families and to oppose all traditions which were deemed un-socialist.

In 1950, Léopold Giengs passed away due to a cardiac arrest. He was succeeded by Pierre-Julien Onziema, a younger military officer who represented the more hardline faction of the MSWI. Onziema viewed Giengs' cautious approach as cowardly and a betrayal of the true principles of the revolution, and began a major program to modernise Mabifia along socialist lines. His vision for a new Mabifia was based strongly on the creation of Villes nouvelles, new cities which would be centred on industrial production and take people away from their traditional lands in the hopes that they would be forced to abandon any remaining traditional beliefs or identities and instead embrace the melting pot of a Pan-Bahian proletarian identity. Many traditional leaders were killed even if they did not offer any resistance to the regime; the ANDR was involved in the disappearances of many prominent Irfanic and Catholic clergypeople. The villes nouvelles were unsuccessful in destroying tribal and regional identities, but the melting pot of cultures combined with sense of dissatisfaction with the regime lit the spark for Djeli pop to emerge as a musical genre.

Mabifia entered the United Bahian Republic in 1960. When the federation began to disintegrate in 1964 after the exit of Rwizikuru, tensions with that country under Izibongo Ngonidzashe emerged over the region of Yekumavirira; Onziema coveted the economic potential the coastal region offered, while on the ground ethnic tensions between the Rwizi and the local Kirole provided a convenient justification for intervention. After supporting Kirole insurgents from 1966, in 1968 these tensions boiled over and Mabifian forces invaded Yekumavirira. Despite heavy casualties, with assistance from socialist allies Mabifia would eventually be successful in this conflict, annexing much of Yekumavirira, with the Community of Nations-backed Purple Line drawn up to demarcate a demilitarised border between the two states.

Despite victory in this war, Mabifia's economy was struggling under the weight of the socialist system and the costs of the war effort. Productivity rates had lowered in most areas, while the rural population who had been the backbone of the party's support felt attacked by Onziema's policies of forced urbanisation. Onziema's purges of the army in response to its incompetence during the war, combined with the demobilization of droves of soldiers to create a dangerous source of unrest. Even in the villes nouvelles, which had been intended to be the backbones of support for the regime, people were feeling disillusioned with the authoritarian nature of the state and the destruction of old traditions. News from Garambura, which was smuggled into the country, gave the population aspirations toward democratic reforms. While the cult of personality surrounding Pierre-Julien Onziema helped to hold together the state of affairs, his death in 1972 severely weakened the already struggling MDR. His successor, Soleïman Keïta, was a member of the reformist wing of the party and sought to ease back some of the more oppressive measures put in place by Onziema. However, by this point tensions were so high that he only succeeded in precipitating the fall of the Mabifian Democratic Republic.

Politics

Economy