In a country where freedom of expression is a fundamental right one finds many ways to articulate oneself, may be that’s the reason it is said that ‘its not what happens to you but how you react to it that matters’. This blog is my small effort to give voice to my thoughts, being a student of Political science and International Relations the blog may tend to revolve around socio-political issues. Though my aim will be- not to restrict it to any particular domain, I would like to leave it to my interests and instincts!

Monday, February 28, 2011

Democracy in Egypt

After reading a wide range of articles and analysis on the current situation in Egypt I realized that there has been no decisive judgment for what Egypt is headed for and what is going to be the outcome of this whole diaspora.
The ample speculations range from-
    -If Egypt will end up becoming a more radical Islamic state under the Muslim Brotherhood or
    -If Egypt may have a rough democracy with illiberal connotations or 
   - If the military be able to stabilize socio-political unrest and bring about a smooth transition … so  on n so forth.
And then I stumbled upon the various surveys conducted by Pew research Centre Global attitudes Project which conducted surveys in the Muslim countries. The discoveries made by which are quite unforeseen.
·         - The Pew researchers in a survey- ‘the role of Islam in politics and society‘ found that 84 percent of Egyptians favor the death penalty for people who leave Muslim religion.
·         -Another Pew survey finds that 90 percent of Egyptians say they believe in freedom of religion.
·         -Pew also found that a majority of Egyptians think democracy with protections of free speech and assembly is “preferable to any other kind of government”.
·       -  The Pew survey found wide streams of opinion in Egypt that seem at the very least inhospitable to democracy. When asked which side they would take in a struggle between "groups who want to modernize the country [and] Islamic fundamentalists," 59 percent of Egyptians picked the fundamentalists, while 27 percent picked the modernizers.
·         -In a country in which the army will likely play a deciding role in selecting the next political leadership, just 32 percent believe in civilian control of the military.
·-         And a majority, 54 percent, supports making segregation of men and women in the workplace the law throughout Egypt.
·        - When asked whether suicide bombing can ever be justified, 54 percent said yes (although most believe such occasions are "rare.")
·         -Eighty-two percent supported stoning for those who commit adultery.
·        - And yet at the same time, says Richard Wike, associate director of Pew's Global Attitudes Project, "We found support for some specific features of democracy -- free media, civil liberties, an independent judiciary." Indeed, 80 percent of Egyptians place a high value on free speech, 88 percent on an impartial judiciary and 75 percent on "media free from government censorship."
·        -The Pew 2010 report found that 82 percent of Egyptians hold an unfavorable view of the United States. That's higher than in Pakistan, higher than in Jordan, higher than 18 other nations Pew surveyed. And it is higher than the 72 percent of Egyptians who have an unfavorable view of al Qaeda.
·      -Egyptian opinion of the United States improved briefly in 2009, when Barack Obama became president, but it fell significantly in 2010. Muslim opinion of Obama, who made outreach to Muslims a top priority and traveled to Cairo in June 2009 to address the Islamic world, has also dropped.

It is certainly difficult to explain the coexistence of contrasting attitudes and therefore even more difficult to analyze what will happen next. As far as I can see, the situation in Egypt is headed for an illiberal democratic system.
Usually, In a Democracy, What we conveniently overlook is its ethos. For a democratic polity to function smoothly, requires a democratic fabric deep within. Here the concept of equality- economic, political and most importantly social plays a crucial role. The economic and socio-cultural aspects have to change a great deal in order make democracy a success. A conservative and rigid social existence cannot result into a healthy and flourishing democracy it can only mock it.

Machiavelli once said “we should esteem a man who is liberal, not a man who decides to be so.” This probably means that there is a philosophical difference between a man who has liberal values innate within himself and another who might as well resolve to be so but cannot go beyond pretence. In this context the difference lies in how one perceives democracy and liberal values. Is the call for freedom limited only to the economic disparity between elites and masses; unemployment and corruption or is it speaking of the western concept liberty and equality (Lock, Rousseau, Hobbes school of thought)?
Therefore, I believe the Egyptian revolution lacks ideas & ideology. It is a mass uprising, for a cause but the cause remains highly undefined in many areas. The very essential issue in the Arab world is of equality, women’s empowerment, gender equality, gender justice, economic disparity and freedom of thought and expression, these questions are still not seen to be discussed. And hence the democracy in Egypt will depend on the merit of its constitution and the constitutionalism that it aims to follow.  If this is the case with one of the most liberal states(Egypt)  in the middle east there is very little expected from the others who are following Egypt’s lead.

Thus the uprisings, sprouting all over Middle East, although very significant lack ‘thought’ as of now. One can only hope that this uprising takes the form of a movement and further leads to addressing the more deep-rooted questions and issues in the Arab society.


1 comment:

  1. Good read.
    The analysis is quite different. When all world is saying it as New wave of democracy, New nationalism and what not, your analysis takes a very different and convincing stand.
    The role of Islamic brotherhood and Islam in this revolution is very puzzling one. Reading it as from 0 to 100%. Not getting exactly, what kind of role it is playing. The time will tell only. But, what I think is, the role is at the spiritual level. People believes in Islam not as alternative to the regime, but as the power to carry out this change.
    I will be happy to here something on this.

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