Friday, January 31, 2014

Future of political Islam: Lessons from Turkey, Egypt

First Published at Al Monitor
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/01/islam-turkey-egypt-ideology-islamist-law.html

Political Islam from protest to governing



Most Islamist political parties in the Middle East initially emerged as movements calling to apply Sharia and restore the caliphate state. By successfully incorporating religious claims within their agenda, these movements were able to launch powerful critiques against those regimes in the region that were undergoing a growing legitimacy crisis. They were also able to derive support from large segments of society that were frustrated with the corruption, authoritarianism and clientelism of these existing governments.

As protest movements, these Islamist parties never felt the need to develop habits of negotiation and compromise. Yet, their ideological rigidity has become a source of anxiety for many in the region who do not share their vision. The question before us is whether such Islamist political parties will replace secular authoritarian regimes with religious authoritarian ones, or whether they will be willing to become a part of the democratic transformations desperately needed in the region. The Justice and Development Party(AKP) government in Turkey and the short-lived experiment of the Muslim Brotherhood regime in Egypt provide us with rich narratives about the future governing prospects of these Islamist political parties. The future stability of countries in the region depend upon the ability of these Islamist political parties to shift from being rigid ideological movements to pragmatic political organizations, as well as upon the existence of other political forces that might assist in steering these political parties in this latter direction.

The AKP government in Turkey


The AKP’s initial success after its first election victory in 2002 was due to its ability to distance itself from the title of “Islamist” and define itself instead as “Muslim democratic,” in addition to its ability to initiate a broader political and economic agenda with democratic reforms at the center and its promise to become a government free of corruption. Such initiatives allowed the AKP government to build alliances with groups and movements that might otherwise have been skeptical of allying with a political party with Islamic credentials.

Until its third election victory in 2011, the AKP government maintained its reformist character by bringing Turkey closer to the European Union, initiating democratic reforms, avoiding populist economic policies in favor of providing sound public policy and removing the army’s tutelage from the political system. Unfortunately, the June 2011 election marked the end of such reformism. After consolidating its power with nearly a majority of 50%, the AKP quickly moved away from its previous pragmatic approach of governing through alliances and emphasized its Islamic credentials by introducing a series of policies directed at what many non-Islamists in Turkey considered to be lifestyle choices, such as alcohol consumption and the cohabitation of university students.

The eruption of protests across the country in the summer of 2013 were a result of the AKP’s increasingly authoritarian governing style. Rather than reading these protests as a public expression of discomfort — and taking the recent corruption charges seriously before declaring them a conspiracy against the government by the rival Gulen movement — the government is currently pushing legislation within parliament that will not only abolish the separation between the judiciary and the executive but which will completely consolidate the judicial and executive powers at the hands of the government. If the AKP is successful in pushing this legislation through parliament, the regime in Turkey will face a serious legitimacy crisis. The AKP is now governing over a society that is highly polarized along cultural and religious lines.

During its reformist stage, the AKP built alliances with the rest of society and derived support from non-Islamists on the basis of its promise of good governance. After deciding to emphasize its Islamist orientation more forcefully since the last election, the AKP has lost its shine as a role model for the rest of the Middle East, now becoming another autocratic government among others plaguing the region for a long time.

Egypt and the Muslim Brotherhood


Since 1948, when it was banned by the government following a wave of political assassinations, the Muslim Brotherhood has continued to work underground. Hiding behind legal facades, usually dummy front men who are obedient members of the organization, the Brotherhood has operated a growing network of interlinked businesses, charities, unions and mosques. Despite being an illegal entity, it has continued to recruit members, train militias, make alliances with spin-off terrorist organizations and even participate in the political process.

When the Brotherhood reached power in Egypt, Egyptians realized that the organization placed itself above the law and above Egypt. The Brotherhood enjoyed limited support that was inflated by its strong funding, superior organization and logistics and the fragmented nature of its opponents. However, the Brotherhood quickly moved to control all taps of power in the country according to “Tamkeen,” or the empowerment plan, appropriating thousands of government posts to its members and allies. Releasing convicted terroristsfrom prison and allowing mujahedeen to return to Egypt and make the Sinai Peninsula their safe haven, the Brotherhood also used its militias to attack, torture and kill protesters and journalists and put the supreme constitutional court, newspaper offices, opposition parties’ headquarters and the entire Media City under siege.

Islamist movements participate in national politics and democratic elections, although they neither acknowledge the concept of a nation-state based on a homeland nor the governance of democracy. They believe that any Muslim is a part of the umma, the nation of Islam. The difference between that and a union, such as the European Union, is that the latter is still based on nation-states with defined geographic homelands coming together under a unified government. The caliphate state that Islamists believe in is not based on citizenry of those who live in a specific territory or a homeland but one that is based on faith. Mahdy Akef, the Brotherhood’s former spiritual guide, explained that under the Brotherhood’s rule a Malaysian Muslim can become the president of Egypt, whereas a Christian can’t. The potential result of this is the breakup of a state such as Egypt into a Muslim state and a Christian state, similar to what happened in Sudan. Sayyid Qutb, who influenced the shaping of the Brotherhood ideology, sees homeland as “nothing but a fist of rotten dirt.”

Similarly, the Brotherhood — which claimed it was a “godly” organization and hence stood above the law — and other Islamist movements do not acknowledge that laws should come from the people, as they believe that God has given man legislations set out in the Quran, and that a committee of religious scholars should have the ultimate say in what laws are congruent with the word of God and which ones violate His will according to Sharia. Sharia itself is a huge and unlimited body of interpretations and fatwas including some dating back 1400 years. During the Brotherhood’s short rule of Egypt, they made sure to control the committee drafting the new constitution, including ambiguous articles that could in theory annul the constitution and laws through creating backdoors where “Sharia” may be invoked at will.

Islamists not recognizing the authority of “secular” laws or government take the “Taqiyya” — which allows a follower to lie, deceive or engage in illegal acts — to protect himself, his faith or more often the clandestine Gamaa Islamiya, its secret directives, sources of finance, inner workings and plans. They build a parallel state, a state within the state, which commands their first allegiance. Even after they reach power, regimes dominated by Islamist ideologies are bound to reach a dead end, because they are by conviction in conflict with society, its culture, vital interests and norms.

Future of Islamic parties


Islamist parties very often frame themselves as representing the authentic culture, one that has become corrupted by regimes that have been influenced by outside forces. This is a powerful but false narrative that Islamist parties have used to consolidate their base while in opposition. However, once in power, this same narrative of Islamist parties representing the true authentic culture, has only brought instability, polarization and, inevitably, further authoritarianism. 

Middle Eastern societies are not a single monolithic mass of people waiting to discover their cultural essence. They are, instead, complex societies consisting of different ideologies, lifestyles and identities — including different ethnic, religious and cultural identities — with competing interests and objectives. The experiences of the AKP and the Muslim Brotherhood illustrate that Islamist parties have not completed their evolution from being rigid ideological parties, whose sole aim it is to remake their societies in their own image, to pragmatic organizations that are willing to represent and give voice to their followers in a pluralistic political environment. 

We know that Islamist parties have their own societal base and will always be part of the political landscape. The nature of their evolution from protest movements to governing parties will play a key role in the future stability of regimes in the region. We have two roads ahead: Islamist parties can either hold on to their rigid ideological base, trying to mold their societies to fit within their singular vision, or they can accept their role as an influential force in a democratic pluralistic regime, within which the rule of law must guarantee the protection of rights for everyone, including Islamists. Only the second alternative provides a road to stability in the region. The first will only bring more destabilization, conflict and authoritarianism.



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Wednesday, December 25, 2013

الجمعية الوطنية للتغيير: سنصوت بنعم للدستور .. وندعو إلى أوسع مشاركة شعبية في الاستفتاء



 

الجمعية الوطنية للتغيير 

23 ديسمبر 2013

 

الوطنية للتغيير: سنصوت بنعم للدستور .. وندعو إلى أوسع مشاركة شعبية في الاستفتاء

 

    تعلن الجمعية الوطنية للتغيير أنها ستصوت بنعم لمشروع الدستور الجديد وتنسق لإطلاق حملة مع كافة القوى الوطنية والأحزاب السياسية لحشد أوسع مشاركة شعبية للاستفتاء على الدستور في منتصف يناير المقبل، تحت شعار "مستقبلنا بأيدينا".

 

    وقد انتهت الأمانة العامة للجمعية إلى هذا القرار بعد قراءة متأنية للمشروع الذي أعدته لجنة الخمسين، والذي جاء في صياغته النهائية يحمل ملامح دستور عصري يضع اللبنة الأولى في بناء مصر الثورة، ويهيئ الأجواء الملائمة لإنجاز خارطة المستقبل التي توافقت عليها القوى الوطنية في 3 يوليو الماضي عقب ثورة 30 يونيو التي أطاحت للأبد بدستور حكم عصابة "الإخوان" الذي انحرف بأهداف ثورة 25 يناير في الحرية والعدالة الاجتماعية والكرامة الإنسانية.

 

    وتؤكد الجمعية أن مشروع الدستور يضع حجر الأساس لنقلة حقيقية نحو مستقبل أفضل، بإقرار أسس نظام حكم ديمقراطي يقوم على أساس المواطنة، ويحقق التوازن المنشود بين سلطات الدولة، ويحدد اختصاصات وصلاحيات الرئيس، وينظم آليات محاسبته ومحاسبة وزرائه، وإحالتهم للمحاكمة، أو طرح الثقة بهم إذا اقتضى الأمر. كما تضمن مشروع الدستور نصوصا قاطعة في التأكيد على التزام ما أقرته المواثيق الدولية في مجال حقوق الإنسان وحرية الرأي والتعبير وحرية الاعتقاد وممارسة الشعائر الدينية دون تمييز.

 

    وترى الجمعية أن مشروع الدستور يعبر عمليا عن توازن القوى في الخريطة السياسية الراهنة، وما تعكسه من واقع ملئ بالتناقضات، سواء من ناحية عدم اكتمال بنية الأحزاب القائمة، وتأخر اندماج القوى الثورية في الحياة السياسية، واستمرار نفوذ العصبيات القبلية والقوى التقليدية، ما ترتب عليه بالضرورة تمرير بعض بنود فرعية في مشروع الدستور لا تعكس بالدرجة الكافية كل تطلعات قوى الثورة. وتعرب الجمعية عن ثقتها أن هذه البنود سوف تخضع حتما للتعديل مستقبلا مع ترسخ الممارسة الديمقراطية وتطور أداء الكيانات الحزبية القائمة واستكمال بناء مؤسسات الدولة. 

 

    وفي ضوء ما سبق، ترى الجمعية أن أية رهانات على مقاطعة الاستفتاء أو تعطيل إقرار الدستور هي خيارات محفوفة بالمخاطر مع إطالة أمد المرحلة الانتقالية، وما يترتب عليه من افتقاد الاستقرار وتدهور أوضاع الاقتصاد وتزايد معاناة المواطن العادي وزعزعة تماسك كيان الدولة عامة، ما يصب في النهاية في خدمة القوى المعادية للثورة ومن يقف وراءها، ويفسح المجال أمام خلق ظروف لا يمكن أن تهيئ مستقبلا مناخا ملائما لإنتاج دستور أفضل بأية حال، من ثم فإن الجمعية تقول نعم للدستور وتدعو جماهير الشعب للإحتشاد في لجان الاستفتاء لحماية ثورتي 25يناير و30يونيو وخريطة المستقبل.



Sunday, December 08, 2013

The Only Place ... Where Change May Take Place


The only place where change may take place, is within. 

Proactive people know that change has to first happen inside of them. 

They start by themselves fixing things directly under their own influence.


Expect no change from those who only complain and blame everyone else while doing nothing to fix things under their own influence. 

Even when they are loud.  

Specially when they use loud speakers. 

Change needs moving more muscles than those found in one's mouth and throat. 


Reality Exposed

Perception is what we mistakenly call reality.

In politics there are no facts - only public opinion.

في السياسة لا توجد حقائق - فقط رأي عام



Tuesday, November 26, 2013

الأسئلة التي لن يجيب عليه الإخوان أو "المعتذرة"




المعتذرة - أي من يعتذرون بأنهم ليسوا إخوان بس بيحترموهم - ويعتذرون عن كل جرائم ومذابح واغتيالات وإرهاب الإخوان بإن ما كانش قصدهم - وكده


الإخوان والمعتذرة ينسون أن أول دعامات الديمقراطية هي "دولة القانون" وأم من يتحدث عن الشرعية وهو ربيب جماعة إجرامية سرية دولية متحالفة مع الإرهابيين - يجب أولاً أن ينظف نفسه من هذه الارتباطات والانتماءات - ويبجيبوا على هذه الأسئلة:



·        كيف سيقنّنون وضعهم الإجرامي الذي استمرّ تحت الأرض وخارج إطار القانون لمدّة 65 عاماً (!) منذ حلّ الجماعة في العام 1948؟


·        كيف سيقومون بتصفية أصولهم وشركاتهم وحساباتهم السريّة؟


·        كيف سيصفون ميليشياتهم ويسلّمون أسلحتهم التي كدّسوها هم وحلفاؤهم الإرهابيّون في غفلة من الزمان؟


·        كيف سيحرّرون حزبهم وجمعياتهم من التبعيّة لمنظمة سريّة غير شرعيّة؟


·        كيف سيفضّون التداخل ما بين تنظيم دولي يدينون له بالتبعيّة وبين متطلبات الاستقلال الوطني لكلّ الأحزاب السياسيّة في مصر؟


·        كيف سيتوقّفون عن شفط أموال النقابات والعبث بالعمل النقابي والطلابي؟


·        كيف سيعيدون كتابة برنامجهم بحيث يحترم وجود مصر كدولة مستقلة، بعيداً عن فلسفة "طز في مصر"؟


·        كيف سيحمون الأمن القومي لمصر وهم لا يعترفون بالدولة الوطنيّة في الأساس؟


·        كيف سيفضّون تحالفهم مع جماعات الإرهاب الدولي ويضعون نهاية لمسرحيّة "الإرهابي الطيّب والإرهابي الشرير"؟


والأهم من هذا كله:

·        كيف سيعتذرون من الشعب المصري بصدق وبعيداً عن التقيّة والكذب والخداع والنفاق؟


·        كيف سيعتذرون لشباب الإخوان ومؤيّديهم ويصارحونهم بالأخطاء الكارثيّة التي ارتكبتها قيادات الجماعة وأدّت إلى هذا الوضع؟


·        كيف سيقنعون الشعب المصري مرّة أخرى بأنهم جزء منه وأن جماعتهم ليست كياناً فوقه متعالياً عليه يدّعي احتكار الربانيّة ويبتغي "فتح"  مصر وكأنه قوة احتلال؟


في النهاية، علينا أن نعي جيداً أن السعي إلى إقامة منافسة سياسيّة ما بين أحزاب عاديّة وبين جماعة سريّة دوليّة تمتلك الشركات والمليارات وخارجة عن كلّ القوانين وتعمل بمثابة دولة داخل الدولة، هو عبث لا طائل منه وقد كان جزءاً من منافسة مسرحيّة سمح بها النظام السياسي لأغراض معيّنة ولم يعد ممكناً التعايش معها.


 

Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/ar/contents/articles/originals/2013/11/muslim-brotherhood-egypt-initiative-constitution.html#ixzz2ll0hKvg0


Questions which the Brotherhood and Islamist Apologists will never Answer



Brotherhood and Islamist apologists forget that the first pillar of democracy is Rule of Law - something a Clandestine International Crime Organization will never talk about. We wish they will answer these questions: 

  • How can they legitimize their secret organization? This organization has been engaged in clandestine operations working outside the realm of the law for 65 years, ever since the government decree to dissolve the Brotherhood in 1948. 

  • How will they deal with their vast illegitimate assets, companies and secret accounts? Will they surrender them to the government? 

  • When will they disband their militias and hand over the weapons that they have stored in the Sinai and throughout the country? Or do they expect Egyptians to settle for a Libya- or Syria-style state, ruled by militias?

  • What steps will they take to free their party and affiliated civil society organizations from being controlled and manipulated by an illegitimate secret organization?

  • What will they do in order to become an independent and purely Egyptian political party, free from overlapping interests with the global Muslim Brotherhood organization and in compliance with Egyptian laws requiring all political parties to be independent?  

  • How will they disassociate themselves from manipulating syndicates and unions looting their finances?

  • How can they rewrite their political manifesto in a way that respects the sovereignty of Egypt, integrity of its soil and independence of its political will?

  • What ideological changes will they adopt in order to protect the national security of Egypt since they currently do not recognize the concept of a nation-state?

  • When will they disassociate themselves from earlier alliances with international terrorist organizations and end the "good terrorist vs. bad terrorist" act?

And most importantly:

  • When will they apologize to the Egyptian people and show sincere remorse, away from hypocrisy, lies and deceit?

  • How can they apologize to the Brotherhood's youth and their supporters and admit to the catastrophic mistakes the Brotherhood leaders have committed, which led to the current situation?

  • How can they convince the Egyptian people once again that they are their compatriots and that the Brotherhood is not a superior entity that claims to monopolize godliness?

Seeking to establish political competition between law-abiding political parties on the one hand, and some illegal, covert organization on the other, is pointless. In the past, this was a part of a theatrical competition that the regime allowed to serve its own purposes, but is no longer tolerable.




Thursday, November 21, 2013

الجمعية الوطنية للتغيير تدين حرق علم مصر في التحرير

 

أدانت الجمعية الوطنية للتغيير حرق العلم المصري في ميدان التحرير ، وطالبت بمعاقبة من قاموا بهذه الجريمة النكراء ، كما دعت الى ضرورة النص على احترام العلم في الدستور الجديد وتجريم عدم الوقوف للسلام الجمهوري..

وقال احمد طه النقر المتحدث بإسم الجمعية الوطنية للتغيير في تصريح صحفي اليوم الخميس إن ما حدث يوم الثلاثاء في ميدان التحرير ، من حرق للعلم والاعتداء على مبنى الجامعة العربية سلوك مشين ويجب إدانته بقوة من جانب كل الاحزاب السياسية والقوى الوطنية لأن العلم هو رمز الدولة وعدم احترامه او اهانته جريمة يعاقب مرتكبها في كل 

الدول الديمقراطية..


واشار النقر الى ان عدم احترام العلم الوطني والسلام الجمهوري جريمة يرتكبها بعض المنتمين للجماعات التكفيرية والمتاجرة بالدين والتي لا تعرف معنى الوطن ولا تنتمي اليه ، مطالبا بضرورة النص على احترام العلم والسلام الجمهوري في الدستور والقوانين وبرامج الاحزاب السياسية ، ومعاقبة كل من لا يلتزم بذلك من الاحزاب والجماعت والافراد..



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