Kostas Kappos | |
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Born | March 1937 Kefalovriso, Argolis |
Died | September 2005 Athens |
Kostas Kappos (Greek: Κώστας Κάππος, March 1937 in Kefalovriso, Argolis – September 2005, Athens) was an important Greek communist.
During the military junta he was arrested and sent to Lakki in Leros, where he was tortured.[1] He was set free in 1971. In 1972 he became a member of the Office of the Central Secretariat of the Communist Youth of Greece, and in 1973 a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Greece.[1] In 1974 he was arrested again, then set free after the Junta's fall.[1] In the elections of 1974, the first where the Communist Party was allowed to stand after the Greek Civil War, he won a seat in the Greek Parliament,[1] and in 1975 he testified at the Greek Junta Trials.
He was elected a member of the CC of the CP of Greece in every Congress until June 1989.[1] In 1989, he expressed his disagreement with CPG's decision to form a joint government with the conservative party of New Democracy and he participated in the formation of a new organisation named New Left Current, where he was elected member of its 31-member Committee.[2]
He wrote nine books and also contributed to the communist theory with his essays.[1] Kappos' core idea about the construction of Socialism is developed in his book "Criticism of the Soviet formation".[3]
Until his death Kostas Kappos was sending part of his Parliament retirement pension to Fidel Castro and the Cuban government as "help to the Cuban revolution".[4]