Anti-Imperialist National Democratic Front
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The Anti-Imperialist National Democratic Front (AINDF; Template:Korean) is a banned united front organization in South Korea.
The AINDF is guided by Juche, the official state ideology of North Korea, and aims to carry out a popular revolution in South Korea, achieve independence by removing the United States Forces Korea, and hasten the reunification of the country. The AINDF is identical in organization to the Democratic Front for the Reunification of Korea, the de jure united front of North Korea, and has missions in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang (the only ostensibly South Korean organization to) and another in Japan.Template:Sfn
The AINDF is banned in South Korea under the National Security Law as a spy group for the Workers' Party of Korea, the ruling party of North Korea, but operates clandestinely within the country and is regarded as a legitimate organization by North Korea.
History
The Anti-Imperialist National Democratic Front was officially founded on 25 August 1969 by Kim Jong-tae (Template:Korean), who published a magazine named Chongmaek (Template:Korean), and Choi Yong-do as the Revolutionary Party for Reunification (Template:Korean), with a history dating back to the 1964 formation of a preparatory committee. The group was established during the period of the Third Republic of Korea, an anti-communist military dictatorship under President Park Chung Hee, and both founders were executed along with other leaders of the organization; other members were sentenced to long prison terms. Kim Jong-tae's wife and two children were never seen again.
On 27 July 1985, it renamed itself to the National Democratic Front of South Korea ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), and renamed its propaganda broadcasting station (that had a main station in Haeju) from "Revolutionary Party for Reunification" (Template:Korean) to "Voice of National Salvation" (Template:Korean).Template:Sfn It adopted its current name on 23 March 2005.Template:Sfn
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- 1969 establishments in South Korea
- Banned political parties in South Korea
- Banned communist parties
- Organizations banned under the National Security Act (South Korea)
- Korean nationalist parties
- Far-left politics in South Korea
- North Korea–South Korea relations
- Political parties established in 1969
- Socialist parties in South Korea
- Juche political parties
- Anti-American sentiment in South Korea