The Awami Workers Party (Urdu: عوامی ورکرز پارٹی) is a left-wing socialist political party[3][4] in Pakistan.[5] The party seeks to unify the struggles of workers, peasants, students, women and ethnic and religious minorities in Pakistan under the banner of a democratic and socialist political system. After the death of the AWP's founding leader Fanoos Gujjar in 2018,[6] Senior Vice President Yousuf Mustikhan became its president.[7] but after the death of Yousuf Mustikhan in September 2022,[8]Akhtar Hussain[9] was elected as president.
History
Foundation
The party was formed on November 11, 2012,[10][11] as a merger of Labour Party Pakistan, Workers Party Pakistan and Awami Party Pakistan.[12] While not the first attempt to unify the Left, the AWP generated excitement among progressives due to its promise of building upon the left's best traditions and making adaptations necessary for a viable project.[13]
Federal Congress
The party held its First Federal Congress on September 27–28, 2014 in Islamabad and elected its national leadership following sub-national party elections around the country. Abid Hassan Minto was elected as president,[14]Fanoos Gujjar as chairman and Farooq Tariq as general secretary.[15][16]
The Second Federal Congress was held on October 15-16, 2016 in Karachi.[17][18] Fanoos Gujjar, was elected as the president and Akhter Hussain (former president Sindh Bar Council) as general secretary.[19]
AWP took part in the 2015 elections in Gilgit-Baltistan. Baba Jan was AWP's candidate in GBLA-6 constituency. Jan came second[22] to PMLN'sMir Gazanfar Ali. New elections in GBLA-6 were expected to be held in September 2016 after the seat became vacant on Mir Gazanfar's appointment as Governor. However, Baba Jan's paper was rejected.[23] Akhun Bhai contested the by polls in place of Baba Jan.[24]
General Elections 2018
In the 2018 Pakistani general election, AWP received 35,870 votes.[25]
In July, 2018, at the Karachi Press Club, secretary general, advocate Akhtar Hussain, and senior vice president Yousuf Mustikhan, issued the party’s 10-point agenda as their manifesto. The main focus of manifesto was abolishing the medieval tribal and feudal system in the country.[26]
Fanoos Gujjar contested elections from his native constituency, Buner in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.[34]
GB Elections 2020
In the 2020 GB Elections, Baba Jan submitted papers as primary candidate for the GBA-6 Hunza seat and Asif Saeed Sakhi[35] as Jan's covering candidate. Jan’s candidature was rejected[36] and Sakhi contested the elections on AWP ticket. He got 2,612 votes and came fifth in the polls.[37]
General Elections 2024
In the 2024 General Elections, AWP nominated Iqbal Jahan for NA-47. He received 148 votes and 20th position in the polls[38]
Fanoos Gujjar, the founding member of AWP and served as chairman of the party from 2012 to 2016,[46][47][48][18][49] and president of the party from 2016 till his death.[50][51][52] He died on December 1, 2018, due to cardiac arrest in his native village Riyal, Union Council Batala, district Buner. He was suffering from multiple diseases and left with just one kidney since ten years.[51][53]
Departure of LPP member
In October 2019, one member of Labour Party announced its resignation from the AWP. LPP leader and former AWP General Secretary Farooq Tariq alleged that his group was being "witch-hunted" in the party, and said that the party had been reluctant to work with farmers', workers' and democratic movements, or to campaign for the release of political prisoner Baba Jan, a leading AWP member.[54]
Release of Baba Jan and other workers
Baba Jan (former vice-president AWP and currently a member of the Federal Committee)[55] was sentenced to 71 years in jail along with 14 people by the Gilgit-Baltistan courts; they were tried for charges of terrorism for inciting public against the state during the Aliabad incident.[56][57] He was released from jail after nine years on November 27, 2020, after a week-long Aliabad sit-in by the families of the prisoners.[58]
Activities
The party has been one of the only groups actively defending against demolition and eviction of informal housing residents from state machinery especially the CDA. [59][60]
The party regularly holds seminars, lectures and workshops detailing the position of the party in the current political environment, across Karachi, Islamabad and Gilgit Baltistan.