Islamic Unity Party of Afghanistan حزب وحدت اسلامی افغانستان Hezb-e Wahdat Islami Afghanistan | |
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Leader | Karim Khalili |
Founder | Abdul Ali Mazari |
Founded | 1989 |
Preceded by | Tehran Eight |
Headquarters | Kabul, Afghanistan |
Ideology | Hazara nationalism Shia Islamism Anti-communism |
Colors | Black, red and green |
Party flag | |
Website | |
[1] | |
Hezb-e Wahdat-e Islami Afghanistan (Dari: حزب وحدت اسلامی افغانستان, "the Islamic Unity Party of Afghanistan"), shortened to Hezbe Wahdat (حزب وحدت, "the Unity Party"), is an Afghan political party founded in 1989. Like most contemporary major political parties in Afghanistan, Hezb-e Wahdat is rooted in the turbulent period of the anti-Soviet resistance movements in Afghanistan in the 1980s. It was formed to bring together nine separate and mostly inimical military and ideological groups into a single entity.
During the Second Afghan Civil War, it emerged as one of the major actors in Kabul and some other parts of the country. Political Islamism was the ideology of most of its key leaders, but the party gradually tilted towards its Hazara ethnic support base and became the key vehicle of the community's political demands and aspirations. Its ideological background and ethnic support base has continuously shaped its character and political agenda. Through the anti-Soviet jihad and the civil war, Hezb-e Wahdat accumulated significant political capital among Afghanistan's Hazaras.
By 2009, however, Hezb-e Wahdat was so fragmented and divided that the political weight it carried in the country bore little resemblance to what it had once been. It had fragmented into at least four competing organizations, each claiming ownership of the name and legacy of Hezb-e Wahdat.[1]