The National Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party – Yemen Region ( ar, حزب البعث العربي الاشتراكي القومي - قطر اليمن ''Hizb Al-Ba'ath Al-Arabi Al-Ishtiraki Al-Qawmi - Qutr Al-Yaman'') is a
political party in
Yemen. The party is the Yemeni regional organisation of the
Iraq-led Ba'ath Party. The secretary of the party in Yemen is Dr. Qassam Salam Said.
Abdulwahid Hawash serves as the deputy secretary. The party publishes the newspaper ''Al-Ehyaa Al-'Arabi'' (لإحياء العربي, 'Arabic Renaissance').
Ba'athism in Yemen originates back to the 1950s. The party carried out clandestine political activity until 1990. It obtained official registration as the 'National Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party' on 10 February 1997. The party had initially sought to register itself as the 'Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party' in 1995, but that name was accorded by the authorities to the
Yemeni regional branch of the
Syria-led Ba'ath Party.
The party contested the
1993 parliamentary election in alliance with the pro-Syria Ba'ath Party, winning seven seats. After the election the relations between the two Ba'athist groups soured, though, and they went on to contest further elections separately. The party contested the
1997 parliamentary election, but failed to win any seats. The party called for a boycott of the
1999 presidential election. In the
2003 parliamentary elections, the party obtained 23,745 votes (0.4% of the national vote) and again failed to re-enter parliament.
The party won two district council seats in the 2006 local council elections. In February 2000, Dr. Qassam Salam, the branch's leader, was sued by the Ministry of Information because of an article critical of
Saudi Arabia.
Politically, the party is aligned with the ruling
General People's Congress. During the
Arab Spring, this posture caused an internal split in the party. In March 2011, there were reports that the
Al Hudaydah
Al-Hudaydah ( ar, الْحُدَيْدَة, al-ḥudayda), also transliterated as Hodeda, Hodeida, Hudaida or Hodeidah, is the fourth-largest city in Yemen and its principal port on the Red Sea.
As of 2004, its population was 402,560 and it is ...
branch of the party had sided with the uprising, following violent attacks on protestors in that city.
See also
*
Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party – Yemen Region
*
People's Vanguard Party (South Yemen)
References
External links
Facebook page of the party
{{DEFAULTSORT:National Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party - Yemen Region
1955 establishments in Asia
Arab nationalism in Yemen
Ba'athist parties
Yemen
Establishments in the Kingdom of Yemen
Formerly banned socialist parties
Organizations of the Arab Spring
Organizations of the Yemeni Crisis (2011–present)
Political parties established in 1955
Political parties in Yemen
Socialist parties in Yemen
Yemeni Revolution