Abdulkarim Tofiq Ahmed, a jurist and politician, became a member of the Political School of the Revolutionary Party in 1945. In 1945, he contacted the ranks of the Kurdish Liberation Party. In 1946, he was elected as a member of the central committee of the Kurdish Democratic Party at the first congress. In 1946, he was elected as a member of the political school at the first meeting of the central committee. In 1950, he was elected as a member of the central committee of the Kurdish Democratic Party by the conference delegates at the Koye conference. In 1951, he was a delegate to the second congress of the Kurdish Democratic Party in Baghdad.
Biography
Abdulkarim Tofiq Ahmed was born in the city of Erbil. In 1940, he worked as an active member in the town of Koye at the beginning of the activities of the Kurdish Youth Party. In 1942, he completed the King Faisal Preparatory School in Baghdad in English. In 1942, he was admitted to the College of the Right of the People in Baghdad. In 1944, he was established in Baghdad by the order of Inhisari Tutin. In 1944, he became a member of the leadership of the Union of Struggle (Wahde Al Nizal) association. In 1945, he became a member of the political school of the Communist Party of Kurdistan of Iraq (Hizba Şoreş). In 1945, he contacted the ranks of the Kurdish Liberation Party. In 1945, he became a member of the editorial board of the Şoreş newspaper, the organ of the Communist Party of Kurdistan of Iraq and the organ of the Kurdish Liberation Party. In 1945, the printing house of the Communist Party of Iraqi Kurdistan and the Kurdish Liberation Party, which was actually a single printing house, was closed in the house where he lived in Baghdad. He passed away in Baghdad in 1983 and was buried in the town of Koya.
Worksheet
Abdulkarim Tofiq Ahmed participated in the congress of the Revolutionary Party in Baghdad in the early summer of 1946 and voted to join the Kurdish Democratic Party. In 1946, at the first congress of the Kurdish Democratic Party and at the first unification, he was elected by the congress delegates as a member of the central committee of the Kurdish Democratic Party. In 1946, he was elected as a member of the political school at the first meeting of the central committee. In 1946, he lived secretly in a house where the Party's secret printing and writings were kept in the A'zemiye neighborhood of Baghdad. In 1947, he graduated from the College of Law in Baghdad with a bachelor's degree. In 1947, he was transferred to the town of Koya in the province of Erbil with the title of Inhisari Tutin. In 1950, Koye was elected a member of the central committee of the Kurdish Democratic Party by the conference delegates. In 1951, he was a delegate to the second congress of the Kurdish Democratic Party in Baghdad. In 1953, he retired from party work.
In 1953, he was transferred to the town of Halabja, which is now part of the former Sulaymaniyah province and Halabja province, as an observer of the Inhisari Tobacco. In 1954, regarding the fraud of the Iraqi government in the Sulaymaniyah Municipality elections, lawyer Omar Mustafa Muhammad Amin (1923 - 1992) was named Omar Debabe and lawyer Celil Yusif Ehmed (1921 - 1996) known as Celil Hoşyar, protested and were arrested by the authorities and deported to the city of Erbil. The people of Koye protested and demanded their return, and he was one of them. In 1959, he became the deputy director of the monopoly of tobacco in the governorate of Sulaymaniyah. In 1960, he became the director of the monopoly of tobacco in the province of Sulaymaniyah. In 1960, he became the director of the monopoly of tobacco in Erbil. In 1963, he was arrested and tortured by the National Guard forces (Al Heres Al Qawmi). He was released after eight months of detention. At the end of 1963, he started working as the director of the Sulaymaniyah Tobacco Monopoly Administration and then became the director of the Hewler Tobacco Monopoly until 1970. In 1970, he was transferred to Baghdad and became the general director of the Tobacco Monopoly in Baghdad. In 1970, he became the Chairman of the Executive Council of the Iraqi Tobacco Monopoly. In 1972, he became the editor-in-chief of the Tobacco magazine. On February 6, 1972, he retired at his own request by a republican decree. He passed away on June 16, 1983 in Baghdad and was buried in the town of Koya. He was fluent in Kurdish, Arabic and English.
Source:
1- Archives of the Encyclopedia Committee of the Kurdistan Democratic Party.




