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Libyan National Movement

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political party in Libya
Not to be confused with theLibyan Popular National Movement
This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(April 2015)
Libyan National Movement
الحركة الوطنية الليبية
Secretary-GeneralMuftah Lamlum
FoundedDecember 1980; 44 years ago (1980-12)
Preceded byLibyan Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party
NewspaperSawt at-Talia (discontinued)
IdeologyArab nationalism
Ba'athism
Left-wing nationalism
National affiliationNational Conference for the Libyan Opposition
Party flag
Website
sawt-altalea.com

TheLibyan National Movement (Arabic:الحركة الوطنية الليبية,al-Ḥarakah al-Waṭanīyah al-Lībīyah) is aLibyan political organization. The Libyan National Movement was established in December 1980, by opponents ofMuammar Gaddafi's government.[1] The founder of the organization was theBa'athist lawyer Umran Burweiss.[2] Muftah Lamlum is the general secretary of the Libyan National Movement.[3] Politically, the Libyan National Movement has aleft-wing nationalist agenda with a Ba'athist orientation.[4] The organization operates in exile, primarily amongst Libyans in Europe, during the mid-1980s it was active amongst students abroad.[2][4] The publication of the organization was calledSawt at-Talia ('Voice of the Vanguard'). The magazine was later discontinued and substituted by a website.[1][4]

The organization was originally financed byIraqi Ba'athists.[5] which enabled it to produce relatively high-quality propaganda materials. For example, it issued audio cassettes, which were smuggled into Libya, alongsideSawt at-Talia during the 1980s.[6] The organization also ran radio broadcasts over Radio Baghdad.[6]

In January 1987, the Libyan National Movement and seven other opposition groups (such as the Libyan National Struggle Movement and the Libyan Liberation Organization) agreed to form a working group headed by MajorAbd al Munim al Huni, a former RCC member who had been living inCairo since the 1975 coup attempt.[7]

In July 2005, the Libyan National Movement took part in a foundation of theNational Conference for the Libyan Opposition in London, which signed a joint 'national accord' calling for the removal of Gaddafi from power and the establishment of a transitional government.[8][9]

References

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  1. ^abمن نحــن [About] (in Arabic), Libyan National Movement, archived fromthe original on 2007-10-24.
  2. ^abTachau, Frank.Political Parties of the Middle East and North Africa. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press, 1994. p. 375
  3. ^We have defeated fear and we're not going back now, Times of Malta, 2011-02-26.
  4. ^abcRay, Donald I.Dictionary of the African Left: Parties, Movements and Groups. Aldershot, Hants u.a: Dartmouth, 1989. p. 79
  5. ^The Middle East, Volumes 111–12. London: IC Magazines, etc., 1984. p. 20
  6. ^abShaked, Haim and Daniel Dishon (eds.).Middle East Contemporary Survey, Vol. 8, 1983–84. p. 583
  7. ^"Libya",Opposition to Qadhafi, USA: Country Studies.
  8. ^The Gulf Today.Hichem Karoui: Leader of mercenaries and slaves
  9. ^Eurasia Review.Libya: Political Dynamics And Profiles – AnalysisArchived 2011-06-06 at theWayback Machine

External links

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