Seydou CissokhoSeydou Cissokho (September 6, 1929 – March 10, 1986) was a Senegalese politician.[1][2][3] YouthCissokho was born at Bakel. His father worked as a blacksmith.[3] The young Cissokho became a school teacher. He finished his secondary education in 1949. He worked in the countryside, later beginning to teach in Kaolack and Dakar.[3] Political activistCissokho was also involved in the struggle against French colonial rule.[1] During his years as a student he had joined the Communist Study Groups (GEC).[3][4] He also became a member of the African Democratic Rally (RDA).[3] He took part in founding the African Independence Party (PAI, later renamed the Party of Independence and Labour, PIT), the first Marxist-Leninist political party in West Africa, in 1957.[1][5] Following the ban on the party in 1960, Cissokho was active in underground organizing work.[1] He lost his employment as a result of his political work.[3] Party leaderThe 1962 party executive committee meeting held in Bamako confirmed Cissokho as the deputy general secretary of the Central Committee.[1][6][7] In 1967 an extraordinary conference placed Cissokho at the helm of a provisional committee to lead the party. Within the party Cissokho represented a hard-line, pro-Soviet Marxist-Leninist position.[2][3] The first party congress, held illegally in Senegal in 1972, confirmed the expulsion of the PAI general secretary Majhmoud Diop and elected Cissokho as party general secretary.[1][6][7][8] Cissokho played an important role in organizing the first conference of Communist and Workers' Parties of Tropical and Southern Africa.[2] PIT legalizedCissokho spent two decades as leader of the underground party. In 1981 PIT was legalized and Cissokho led the efforts for the formation of an anti-imperialist united front. He was elected party chairman at the second PIT congress, held in 1984.[1] Cissokho died in Moscow whilst visiting the 1986 Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[9] References
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