Afghanistan Mujahedin Freedom Fighters Front

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Afghanistan Mujahedin Freedom Fighters Front
جبهه مبارزين مجاهد افغانستان
LeadersMulavi Dawood
Dates of operation1979–unknown
Group(s)Islamic Revolution Movement
Afghanistan Liberation Organization
Liberation Organization of the People of Afghanistan
Sazman-e-al-Jihad
Society for the Defense of Islam
National Liberation Front
IdeologyBig tent opposition to the communist regime and Soviet presence in Afghanistan
AlliesRevolutionary Group of the Peoples of Afghanistan
Liberation Organization of the People of Afghanistan
OpponentsSoviet Union Soviet Union
Afghanistan Democratic Republic of Afghanistan
Hezb-e Islami Gulbuddin
Battles and warsSoviet-Afghan War

Afghanistan Mujahedin Freedom Fighters Front (Persian: جبهه مبارزين مجاهد افغانستان, AMFF or AMFFF) was a united front of four Afghan paramilitary factions, formed on the initiative of Maoist groups, including the Revolutionary Group of the Peoples of Afghanistan (RGPA, later named Afghanistan Liberation Organization [ALO]) and the Liberation Organization of the People of Afghanistan (SAMA)—together with moderate Islamists including the Afghanistan National Liberation Front, in June 1979.[1] They set aside their ideological differences in the fight against a common enemy. The Front fought against the pro-Soviet government and later also the Soviet Army during the Soviet–Afghan War.

History[]

On August 5, 1979, the Front tried to initiate an uprising against the Khalq government. The move, which was brutally crushed, became known as the Bala Hissar uprising.[2]

The most famous publication of AMFFF was called Neither Puppet Regime nor Fundamentalism, Freedom and Democracy!, which was widely distributed across Afghanistan in the early 1980s.

The head of AMFFF was Mulavi Dawood, who was abducted and killed by Islamic Party in Peshawar in November 1986.

References[]


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