The Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Red Flag (Malayalam: സി.പി.ഐ (എം.എല്) റെഡ് ഫ്ളാഗ്) is a Marxist-Leninist political party in India. The party is one of the most moderate factions of the wider Naxalite movement.[1]
The main leader of the party is P.C. Unnichekkan, the Kerala State Committee secretary of the party.[2][3] Yuvajana Vedi is the youth wing of the party.[3]
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The party emerged out of a split in the erstwhile Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Red Flag (led by K.N. Ramachandran) in 2003. The Unnichekkan group opposed the merger of CPI(ML) Red Flag with Kanu Sanyal's Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist). Another issue of disagreement was the question of participation in the World Social Forum, which the Unnichekkan group opposed. The Unnichekkan group organised a national conference of their own at the Nayanthahalli Nityananda Dhana Mandiram in Bangalore on December 20-21, 2003, electing a party Central Committee consisting of M.S. Jayakumar (All India Secretary)[4], Ayyappa Hughar (Karnataka), K. Chandrasekhar (Karnataka), L. Govindaswami (Tamil Nadu), M.M. Somasekharan (Kerala), P.C. Unnichekkan (Kerala) and P.J. Baby (Kerala).[5]
The party had two candidates in the 2004 parliamentary election, both contesting as independents. T.B. Mini, a member of the Kerala State Committee of the party, contested the Ernakulam Lok Sabha seat, getting 10,418 votes (1.6% of the valid votes in that constituency). K.T. Kunhikannan, a Kerala State Secretariat member of the party, contested the Vadakara seat, getting 7,482 votes (0.9%). [6][7]
The party opposed the 2006 protests against quotas for backward classes in higher education, claiming that the protestors represented a segment of the rich urban elite. The party called for nationwide agitations to support the introduction of reservations for backward classes in the educational system.[8]
In March 2008, K.T. Kunhikannan and his followers was expelled from the party for having sought closer relations with the Communist Party of India (Marxist). Kunhikannan then organized his own CPI(ML) Red Flag. In April 2008, Kunhikannan's faction merged into CPI(M).[2]
Ahead of the 2009 parliamentary election, the party declared its support for the candidates of the Left Democratic Front, for the sake of securing victory of secular forces.[4] Unnichekkan motivated this position stating dissatisfaction with the foreign policies of both the National Democratic Alliance and the United Progressive Alliance (the two main political blocs at the national level), claiming that both groups sought to align India with Israel.[9]