Burkinabé Communist Group
Burkinabè Communist Group (in French: Groupe Communiste Burkinabè) was a communist party in Burkina Faso. GCB surged as a split from the Voltaic Revolutionary Communist Party in 1983, following the refusal of PCRV to support the revolutionary government of Thomas Sankara.
Burkinabé Communist Group | |
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Founded | 1983 |
Dissolved | 1991 |
Split from | Voltaic Revolutionary Communist Party |
Succeeded by | Movement for Socialist Democracy |
Ideology | Communism Marxism-Leninism |
Political position | Left-wing |
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Burkina Faso |
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Parliament
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Administrative divisions |
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In 1986 GCB signed a declaration, together with the Reconstructed Communist Struggle Union, Union of Burkinabè Communists and Revolutionary Military Organization, calling for revolutionary unity. At that time GCB held one minister in the government, Watamou Lamien, Minister of Information and Culture.
In 1989 GCB left the government, following its refusal to join ODP/MT. GCB turned clandestine. In April 1989 it split in two factions, one led by Salif Diallo joined the ODP/MT. The other, led by Jean-Marc Palm became the Movement for Socialist Democracy (MDS) in March 1991.