Abdul Fattah Ismail Explained

Abdul Fattah Ismail
Native Name:عبد الفتاح إسماعيل
Native Name Lang:ar
Office:Chairman of the Presidium of Supreme People's Council (South Yemen)
Term Start:1970
Term End:21 April 1980
Predecessor:Position established
Successor:Ali Nasir Muhammad
Office2:1st General Secretary of the Yemeni Socialist Party
Term Start2:21 December 1978
Term End2:21 April 1980
Predecessor2:Position established
(himself as Secretary-General of the National Front)
Successor2:Ali Nasir Muhammad
Office3:Secretary-General of the National Front[1]
Term Start3:22 June 1969
Term End3:21 December 1978
President3:Salim Rubai Ali
Predecessor3:Qahtan al-Shaabi
Successor3:Position abolished
(himself as General Secretary of the Yemeni Socialist Party)
Birth Date:28 July 1939
Birth Place:Ta'izz, Kingdom of Yemen
Death Date:13 January 1986 (aged 46)
Death Place:Aden, South Yemen
Party:Yemeni Socialist Party
Residence:Aden
Profession:Oil refinery worker, teacher

Abd al-Fattah Ismail Ali Al-Jawfi (Arabic: عبد الفتاح إسماعيل علي الجوفي |translit=ʿAbd al-Fattāḥ Ismāʿīl; 28 July 1939 – 13 January 1986) was a Yemeni politician who was the Marxist de facto leader of South Yemen, officially the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen, from 1978 to 1980 after the overthrow of President Salim Rubai Ali. He served as Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Council (head of state) and founder, chief ideologue and first leader of the Yemeni Socialist Party from 21 December 1978 to 21 April 1980. He died under mysterious circumstances during the 1986 South Yemen Civil War. His body was not found.[2]

Biography

Abdul Fattah was born in July 1934 in Al-Hujariah district of Taiz Governorate in North Yemen. Though his father was a faqīh, he had a poor, rural upbringing. He subsequently followed his elder brother to Aden where he was educated at the Ahliah School in Tawahi district. When he was approximately eighteen, Abdul Fattah enrolled in a British Petroleum workers’ training center and began working in an oil refinery from 1956 to 1959 as an apprentice. In this setting Abdul Fattah began to develop a political consciousness centered around union organizing and labour advocacy. As a co-founder of the Arab Nationalist Movement in South Yemen, he contributed to the formation of a number of Movement cells before he was arrested by the British authorities in Aden for political incitement of workers.In 1961 he became a school teacher at Al-Haswah School in Aden, and at the same time continued his involvement in political activity. He was a co-founder of the National Front for the Liberation of South Yemen (NLF). After the NLF started the 14 October 1963 Revolution for the liberation of South Yemen from British colonial rule, Abdul Fattah became a full-time socialist revolutionary, whereby he undertook the leadership of the NLF underground military wing (fedayeen) in Aden, as well as political activity.

He was elected to the NLF executive in the first, second and third NLF congresses, 1965–67. After South Yemen gained independence in 1967 he was appointed Minister of Culture and Yemeni Unity. In the fourth NLF congress, he was instrumental in determining the progressive line of the revolution. But in March 1968 he was arrested by the right wing of the NLF and went into exile, where he drafted the program for Accomplishing National Democratic Liberation, a leftist manifesto. He undertook a leading role in the consolidation of left wing of NLF which subsequently regained power in the 22 June 1969 "Correction Step."

Subsequent to the "Correction Step" Abdul Fattah was elected Secretary General of the NLF Central Committee, thus making him the country's de facto leader. He was also elected a member of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Council. In 1970 he was elected Chairman of Presidium. He undertook a leading role in the dialogue between NLF and other left parties in south Yemen leading to the formation of the Yemeni Socialist Party (YSP). He was elected Secretary General of the YSP at the first party congress in October 1978. Ideologically, he is considered to have favored the Soviet model of socialist development (as opposed to Maoist alternatives). In October 1979, Abdul Fattah secured the 1979 Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation with the USSR. Similar treaties with East Germany and Ethiopia followed in 1981, following Abdul Fattah's resignation from office. [3]

In 1980 he resigned from all his posts for allegedly health reasons and was succeeded by Ali Nasir Muhammad. However, Abdul Fattah was appointed president of the party before he went to Moscow for medical treatment, until 1985, when he returned in the face of a mounting crisis between Muhammad and his opponents in the YSP.

In October 1985 he was elected to the YSP Politburo and as a Secretary of the Central Committee, but the crisis had erupted on 13 January 1986, into a violent struggle in Aden between Ali Nasir's supporters and Abdul Fattah's supporters (See South Yemen Civil War). Fighting lasted for more than a month and resulted in thousands of casualties and Ali Nasir's ouster.[4]

Disappearance and presumed death

During the crisis, Abdul Fattah disappeared. He was last seen being evacuated from the YSP office along with his deputy Ali Salem Albeidh in a military armored vehicle. Unsubstantiated reports claim he was killed when naval forces loyal to Ali Nasir shelled his home in Aden, but his ultimate fate is unknown. His body was never found.

External links

|-

Notes and References

  1. Web site: عبدالفتاح إسماعيل الرئيس الفدائي . خيوط . 19 September 2023.
  2. 4 executed in S. Yemen coup plot . Chicago Sun-Times. 14 January 1986 . 19 September 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150924193251/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-3745850.html . dead . 24 September 2015 .
  3. Lackner, Helen. P.D.R. Yemen: Outpost of Socialist Development in Arabia, 1985 p. 84
  4. Brehony, Noel, Yemen Divided: The Story of a Failed State in South Arabia, London: I.B. Tauris, 2011, p. 151