HADHARAH ISLAMIYYAH Headline Animator

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Egypt secularists and liberals afraid of democracy?

JULY 15, 2011
By Omar Ashour

Middle East analyst

Nearly 60 years ago, the Egyptian military faced a similar political dilemma to the one it confronts today.

“If I held elections today, al-Nahas would win, not us. Then our achievement would be nothing,” Maj Gamal Abdel Nasser told a meeting of army officers and Muslim Brotherhood leaders on 29 December 1952.

Nasser was discussing the future of political transition in Egypt after the July coup, led by the Free Officers’ Movement, that overthrew King Farouk and eventually saw Nasser installed as Egypt’s president.

The rest of the story is well-known: parliament was dissolved, political parties were banned, basic freedoms were suspended, and the army dominated politics. In short, Egypt lost its freedom.

The man who stood to win – had an election been held in 1952 – was Mustafa al-Nahas, the head of the secular-liberal Wafd Party, once the most popular political party in Egypt.

Worried by the prospect of a liberal electoral victory, the leadership of the Muslim Brotherhood supported the decision of Nasser and his Revolutionary Command Council to ban all political parties.

The reasons were pragmatic, not ideological. The Brotherhood’s leaders thought that this would give them an advantage in a political sphere free of strong actors. That, of course, was an enormous miscalculation.

By 1954, Nasser and his clique dominated the army and had ousted pro-democracy officers, marginalised the liberals and then heavily suppressed his former allies, the Muslim Brotherhood.

The brutal crackdown significantly diminished the local networks of the Brotherhood until the mid-1970s. But it never destroyed them.

Roles reversed

Today there is no Revolutionary Command Council. Egypt is governed by the Supreme Council of Armed Forces.

In the role of the working-class, young, radical and charismatic Maj Nasser is the 75-year-old Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi. Under his command, the council speaks of democratic transition, with a special status reserved for the military, its institutions and interests. The analogy with events nearly 60 years ago is not perfect. Some of the roles have reversed. In the place of the liberals of the Wafd is today’s Muslim Brotherhood.

In a stark contrast of 1952, the Islamists are playing the role of the democrats, and the liberals are calling for the army to stay in power.

Egypt’s first ever free, democratic referendum was held on 19 March 2011. In it, 77.27% of voters approved a package of constitutional amendments that included holding parliamentary elections, and then electing 100 MPs to form a constitutional assembly.

The assembly will craft Egypt’s new constitution within six months. Then, another referendum will be held to approve or reject it.

So, the “Yes” can be seen as a vote for a plan to get out of a volatile political phase.

Being the most organised and, arguably, the most popular party in Egypt, the Brotherhood backed the “Yes” vote and wants elections in September, like the majority of other Egyptian Islamists.

Most secularists, including many leftists and liberals, voted “No”. Today, secular and liberal forces in Egypt are weak, fragmented, organisationally immature and alienated from the wider Egyptian public.

They risk losing any forthcoming elections (whether in September or a year later). They also deeply mistrust the Brotherhood and other Islamist groups.

Assuming it is victorious in September, the Brotherhood may have a strong presence and influence on the constitutional assembly. Egypt could therefore have an Islamist-leaning constitution.

‘Constitution first’

The liberals do have an alternative plan, but it is not a convincing one.

They propose rejecting or ignoring the referendum’s result (the choice of 77% of Egyptian voters), a longer stay in power for the Supreme Council of Armed Forces, and somehow forming a constitutional assembly without elections (there is no consensus on the mechanism). This is the so-called “constitution first” plan.

There are good reasons for the popularity of the Muslim Brotherhood that could offer secularists some salutary lessons for the coming phase.

Very limited political space was granted to Islamists and liberals alike by successive Egyptian presidents.

But the Brotherhood countered this by becoming active in universities and syndicates throughout Egypt, recruiting young people, building coalitions and, eventually, abandoning and de-legitimising political violence. Alongside this, the organisation provided a wide variety of social services.

Their success is down to organisational hard work and impressive dedication. They are in many ways a textbook example of how to survive and prosper in highly unfavourable political conditions.

It seems to have escaped all sides in Egyptian politics though that whoever governs Egypt in September after elections may well end up much less popular after four years. High expectations, poor economic conditions, shocking levels of unemployment and underemployment, a volatile security situation and rapid social change throw up huge challenges for any government, regardless of ideology.

So, the secularists may actually gain more by accepting the results of the referendum that is seen by many as Egypt’s first free and fair democratic exercise, recognising that they are likely to lose the first post-Mubarak election, and strategising for the coming rounds.

This would give them the time to focus on building coalitions, on establishing social service networks, on organising stronger political parties and on relaying their message across Egyptian society and beyond the urban elites.

On this last point, the secular and liberal parties need to always remember that while at least 34% of Egypt’s 55 million adults are illiterate, all of them have the right to vote.

Dr Omar Ashour is Lecturer in Politics and the Director of the Middle East Graduate Studies Program at the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, University of Exeter. He is the author of The De-Radicalization of Jihadists: Transforming Armed Islamist Movements.

BBC

0 comments:

THE METHOD TO ESTABLISH KHILAFAH

video

Blog Archive

archives

Bangsa ini Harus Segera Bertobat

Assalâmu‘alaikum wa rahmatullâhi wa barakâtuh.

Pembaca yang budiman, negeri ini seolah menjadi negeri segudang bencana; baik bencana alam maupun bencana kemanusiaan. Bencana alam ada yang bersifat alamiah karena faktor alam (seperti gempa, tsunami, dll), tetapi juga ada yang karena faktor manusia (seperti banjir, kerusakan lingkungan, pencemaran karena limbah industri, dll). Adapun bencana kemanusiaan seperti kemiskinan, kelaparan serta terjadinya banyak kasus kriminal (seperti korupsi, suap-menyuap, pembunuhan, perampokan, pemerkosaan, maraknya aborsi, penyalahgunaan narkoba, dll) adalah murni lebih disebabkan karena ulah manusia. Itu belum termasuk kezaliman para penguasa yang dengan semena-mena menerapkan berbagai UU yang justru menyengsarakan rakyat seperti UU Migas, UU SDA, UU Listrik, UU Penanaman Modal, UU BHP, dll. UU tersebut pada kenyataannya lebih untuk memenuhi nafsu segelintir para pemilik modal ketimbang berpihak pada kepentingan rakyat.

Pertanyaannya: Mengapa semua ini terjadi? Bagaimana pula seharusnya bangsa ini bersikap? Apa yang mesti dilakukan? Haruskah kita menyikapi semua ini dengan sikap pasrah dan berdiam diri karena menganggap semua itu sebagai ’takdir’?

Tentu tidak demikian. Pasalnya, harus disadari, bahwa berbagai bencana dan musibah yang selama ini terjadi lebih banyak merupakan akibat kemungkaran dan kemaksiatan yang telah merajalela di negeri ini. Semua itu tidak lain sebagai akibat bangsa ini telah lama mencampakkan syariah Allah dan malah menerapkankan hukum-hukum kufur di negeri ini.

Karena itu, momentum akhir tahun ini tampaknya bisa digunakan oleh seluruh komponen bangsa ini untuk melakukan muhâsabah, koreksi diri, sembari dengan penuh kesadaran dan kesungguhan melakukan upaya untuk mengatasi berbagai persoalan yang melanda negeri ini. Tampaknya bangsa ini harus segera bertobat dengan segera menerapkan hukum-hukum Allah SWT secara total dalam seluruh aspek kehidupan mereka. Maka dari itu, perjuangan untuk menegakan syariah Islam di negeri ini tidak boleh berhenti, bahkan harus terus ditingkatkan dan dioptimalkan. Sebab, sebagai Muslim kita yakin, bahwa hanya syariah Islamlah—dalam wadah Khilafah—yang bisa memberikan kemaslahatan bagi negeri ini, bahkan bagi seluruh alam raya ini.

Itulah di antara perkara penting yang dipaparkan dalam tema utama al-wa‘ie kali ini, selain sejumlah tema penting lainnya. Selamat membaca!

Wassalâmu‘alaikum wa rahmatullâhi wa barakâtuh.

Add This! Blinklist BlueDot Connotea del.icio.us Digg Diigo Facebook FeedMeLinks Google Magnolia Ask.com Yahoo! MyWeb Netvouz Newsvine reddit Simpy SlashDot Spurl StumbleUpon Technorati
Cetak halaman ini Cetak halaman ini      

-->
EDITORIAL
10 Jan 2010

Ketika berbicara di televisi BBC, Perdana Menteri Inggris Gordon Brown menyerukan intervensi lebih besar dari Barat di Yaman dan menyerang tuntutan bagi kekhalifahan dunia di dunia Muslim sebagai sebuah “ideologi pembunuh” dan suatu “penyimpangan dari islam “.
Taji Mustafa, Perwakilan Media Hizbut Tahrir Inggris berkata: “Gordon Brown, seperti halnya Tony Blair yang memerintah sebelumnya, berbohong [...]

Index Editorial
Leaflet
No Image
09 Jan 2010
بِسْـــمِ اللهِ الرَّحْمٰـــنِ الرَّحِيـــم Sia-sia Saja Menggantungkan Harapan Kepada Rencana-rencana Pemerintahan Partai Keadilan dan Pembangunan (AKP)! Pemerintahan Partai Keadilan dan Pembangunan...
Index Leaflet
KALENDER
January 2010
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
   
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
  • 1/24/2010: Halqah Islam dan Peradaban edisi 16
POLLING

Islam hanya mengakui pluralitas, bukan pluralisme. Pandangan Anda?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...
AL-ISLAM
Al-Islam

ACFTA-PASAR BEBAS 2010: “BUNUH DIRI EKONOMI INDONESIA”

Mulai 1 Januari 2010, Indonesia harus membuka pasar dalam negeri secara luas kepada negara-negara ASEAN dan Cina. Sebaliknya, Indonesia dipandang akan mendapatkan kesempatan lebih luas untuk memasuki pasar dalam negeri negara-negara tersebut. Pembukaan pasar ini merupakan perwujudan dari perjanjian perdagangan bebas antara enam negara anggota ASEAN (Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapura, Filipina dan Brunei Darussalam) dengan Cina, [...]

Index Al Islam

EBOOK DOWNLOAD
Ebook Download

Download buku-buku yang dikeluarkan Hizbut Tahrir, dalam bahasa Indonesia, Arab dan Inggris.

Download disini

RSS NEWSLETTER
Powered By Blogger

Followers