Emirate of Quadaloudistan
Amirat al-Qwdaludystan (Quadalise)
Flag of Quadaloudistan
Flag
of Quadaloudistan
Coat of arms
Motto: Bis shereef wa al-ikhwa
With honor and brotherhood
Anthem: Dirayat Al-Nujum
Royal anthem: Al-Nidal Al-Fakhir
LocationSouth Asia
CapitalAl-Qadimah
LargestQudar Al-Madinah
Official languagesQuadalise
Portuguese[1][2][3]
Recognised national languagesQudalgermanisch
Religion
(2013)
Islam (state religion)
Quadalise paganism (permitted)
Demonym(s)Quadaloudi
GovernmentUnitary semi-constitutional monarchy
• Alamir (Supreme Emir)
Zayd Al-Qudim
• Wazirasas (Prime Minister)
Fahad Al-Qudaimi
Establishment
• Quadaloudi Sheikhdom
1788
• Quadaloudi-Portugese War
1924
• Emirate of Quadaloudistan
1938
• Alamash
2024
Area
• 
22,720 km2 (8,770 sq mi)
Population
• 2023 estimate
30,061,021
GDP (nominal)estimate
• Total
27,587,859,000
HDIIncrease 0.83
very high
CurrencyQuadalise dinar
Driving sideleft

Quadaloudistan, officially the Emirate of Quadaloudistan is a country located in South Asia. Quadaloudistan shares borders with only one nation - India, who completely surrounds it, making Quadaloudistan the largest enclave in Asia and the second largest worldwide, behind Quarkania. Quadaloudistan is a unitary semi-constitutional monarchy led by the Alamir (supreme amir), currently Zayd Al-Qudim who ascended to the throne in 2001 on his father Rashid Al-Qudim's retirement after the 2001 Quadaloudistan Protests, making him the first Quadaloudi German to occupy the throne.

Zayd's reign has been characterised with the introduction of a large welfare state, deals with the Russian Federation and Republic of India education reforms, improvement in human development and a increase in literacy from 59% to 86% and the implementation of a parliament, with the recongition of political parties such as Quadaloudistan Labour Party, The Alamir Party and the Progressive Party being permitted. Despite this change, the Quadaloudistan Republic Movement has still not been permitted, leading to the rapidly expanding popularity of revolutionary currents within the Republic Movement such as with the formation of the Quadaloudistan Republican Army and its nationalistic counterpart - the Quadaloudistan National Redemption Front.

Etymology and pronunciation edit

History edit

Geography edit

Government and politics edit

Government edit

The Emirate of Quadaloudistan used to operate under a Unitary absolute monarchy but after the plan for a transition to a unitary semi-constitutional monarchy, which first begun with the explicit legalisation of political factions which meet a medium-level criteria as a result of the 2023 Quadaloudi constitutional reform, all of which is known as the Alamash (Alama (change) + Ashar (progress)) or the Alamataq (Alama (change) + Taqa (decline)) to its opponents such as The Alamir Party, finished on the 28th March 2024, the Emirate of Quadaloudistan is now a semi-constitutional monarchy, marking an end to 236 years of absolutist rule. The groups previously known as "Factions" have been reformed into officially recognised political parties. The Wazirasas (Prime Minister) of the Emirate of Quadaloudistan is currently Fahad Al-Qudaimi of the Quadaloudistan Labour Party.

2021 Online Radical Law edit

As of December 2021, a new law has been put in place by the Alamir which outlaws websites promoting:

  • Radical political ideology
  • Anti-Quadaloudi sentiment
  • Anti-Islamic sentiment

This change has been met with satisfaction from around 62% of the public, as seen in a Royal Polling, making it the 3rd lowest satisfied law in Zayd's reign.

Political Parties edit

Party Abbr. Leader Political position Ideology
Quadaloudistan Labour Party
Hizb Al-Amal Al-Qudaloudi
HAQ Fahad Al-Qudaimi Centre-left to left-wing Social democracy
Islamic socialism
The Alamir Party
Hizb Al-Amir
HAA Amir Al-Aziz Centre Zaydism
Absolute monarchism
Quadalese nationalism
Opposition to the Alamataq
Progressive Party
Hizb Al-Taqaddum
HAT Tariq Al-Qasimi Centre to Centre-right Progressivism
Liberalism
Secularism
Constitutional Coalition
Ittihad al-Dusturi
IAD Klaus Al-Quadisch Right-wing Constitutional monarchism
Economic liberalism
Secularism
Minority interests
Quadaloudistan United Left

Qudaludistanmuwahhidlyasar 2024[4]

Q2024 Jamilah Al-Faris Left-wing Democratic socialism
Monarcho-socialism
Syndicalism
Progressivism
Left-wing populism
Quadaloudistan Republican Army (Illegal)
Jaysh Al-Jumhuriya Al-Qudaloudi
HAT Rashid Al-Abadi Left-wing to Far-left Republicanism
Revolutionary socialism
Conservative socialism
Left-wing populism
Quadaloudistan National Redemption Front (Illegal)
Jabhat Al-Tajdid Al-Qawmiya Al-Qudaloudi
HAT Nasser Al-Azmi Pragmatic politics Republicanism
Left-wing nationalism
Authoritarianism
Revolutionary nationalism
Ultranationalism
Terrorism
Lusophobia
Quadaloudistan National People's Party (Illegal)
Hizb al-Sha'b al-Qudaludistani al-Watani
HSQW Khalid Al-Hakim Syncretic Republicanism
National Marxism
Authoritarian conservatism
Lusophobia
Germanophobia
Hinduphobia
Irredentism
  1. ^ "As per the 1844 agreement between the Portuguese Empire and Quadaloudistan, the Portuguese language shall be recognisied and catered for nationwide."
  2. ^ Despite being an official language, Portuguese is heavily discriminated against in Quadaloudistan, with instances of police brutality against the shrinking Lusoquadaloudi population being suffered by around 1 in 14 Lusoquadaloudis.
  3. ^ Factions such as the Progressive Party, The Alamir Party and the illegal Quadaloudistani National Redemption Front have proposed stripping Portuguese of its official language status.
  4. ^ Endonym and exonym differ with the inclusion of 2024 in the endonym.