http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2007/862/op3.htm

13 - 19 September 2007
Issue No. 862
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

Democracy under siege
Until Arab regimes embody the people they purport to represent they will remain 
fearful of them, writes Ayman El-Amir* 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Democracy in the Arab world is in a bind. It is taking one step forward and two 
steps back. Although the silent majority is growing more active and 
increasingly restive, its yearning for democratic change has no sense of 
direction except, perhaps, the Islamist way. It has been tantalised by two 
examples of democratic and peaceful change, first in Mauritania and more 
recently in secular Turkey. However, it does not have the institutional power 
structure to emulate these experiences. For the past decade, conditioned 
political parties, opposition movements, factory workers and professional 
unions have staged demonstrations, protests and strikes, clashed with 
government troops and filed lawsuits in courts, but have been skilfully 
outmanoeuvred and contained by the regimes in power. Government-licensed 
political parties have little to no access to genuine power sharing leading to 
peaceful change.

The ruling elite, especially in impoverished Arab countries, has framed the 
challenge of the agitated masses as a showdown of physical power. In the uneven 
test of wills, the masses have no clubs, riot gear, electric shock batons, 
teargas canisters, rubber bullets or water canons. They only have the dubious 
power of the ballot box that, they claim, is often stuffed in favour of 
government-approved candidates. So their chances of promoting peaceful change 
through elections are virtually non-existent. In this confrontational 
environment the elite does condescendingly engage, from time to time, in 
selective discourse with the tame opposition while it reserves a great deal of 
ammunition for suppressing more powerful factions like the Muslim Brotherhood. 
Both the elite and the people invariably agree on the definition of endemic 
problems that plague beleaguered countries: poverty, unemployment, high-priced 
costs of living, epidemic-scale diseases, poor health services and quality of 
education, institutional corruption, political repression and the trampling of 
human rights. All agree on the need for reform but differ about the need for 
change. The elite is all for reform that would go only as far as maintaining 
the status quo. It has to secure its status, privileges and control and does 
not consider change, especially the rotation of power, as a legitimate choice 
of the people. Meanwhile, the people are caught between a rock and a hard 
place, between the vicious circle of polemics and the temptation of uprising.

Not all Arab countries share the same sense of helplessness, although they may 
share part of the political discontent. In Arab monarchies, rotation of power 
is not a matter for the people to decide. In the more affluent, oil- rich 
states the drive for democratic change is tempered by the de facto spread of 
oil wealth. In some monarchies, the exercise of liberal democracy is regarded 
as anathema in societies best controlled by traditional value systems. 
Self-inflicted wounds or simply distrust of the electoral system are sometimes 
part of the problem. It was quite an eye-opener that in parliamentary elections 
in Kuwait this summer not a single female candidate was elected in a country 
where eligible women voters represent 57 per cent of the electorate. 
Parliamentary elections in Morocco last week were marked by a historic low 
turnout (estimated at 37 per cent of the electorate) and a surprising tilt 
towards the conservative and waning Istiqlal Party as opposed to the rising 
Islamic-oriented Justice and Development Party. The final results gave the 
Istiqlal Party a majority of 52 seats over its rival that cried foul play. In 
Egypt, reports of heavy-handed police interference with the 2005 parliamentary 
elections marred the process and discredited the government's proclaimed agenda 
for reform.

It would seem that the concept and practice of liberal democracy in the Arab 
world is in tatters and that, in the prevailing turbulent political 
environment, the region is heading for the unknown. For one thing, the US has 
given democracy a bad name. By invading Iraq and instigating sectarian 
division, the Bush administration has etched on the table of history the 
indelible lesson of how to destroy a country in the name of democracy. The role 
model, if it ever was, has become disreputable. 

A case in point was demonstrated at a press conference in St Petersburg, where 
the G-8 leaders were holding their summit meeting in July 2006. US President 
George W Bush made yet another monumental gaffe by lecturing his host, 
President Vladimir Putin, about the virtues of democracy. Commenting on his 
pre- conference talks with the Russian president, Bush said "I talked about my 
desire to promote institutional change in parts of the world like Iraq, where 
there's a free press and free religion and I told him (Putin) that a lot of 
people in our country, you know, would hope that Russia would do the same 
thing." Putin was quick to retort, "We certainly would not want to have the 
same kind of democracy as they have in Iraq, I will tell you quite honestly." 
It is not that Russia is exactly a democracy. But the fact that the outcome of 
the 2000 US presidential elections were decided by the courts, with some strong 
hints that electronic ballot fraud in Florida lent a helping hand, does not 
make the US a role model either.

Adding to the failure of the socialist system, which few Arab countries 
embraced during the heyday of the former Soviet Union, globalisation and its 
associated market economy offer little hope for impoverished masses. This has 
given rise to political Islam as the panacea for all problems. "Islam is the 
solution" was the slogan of the 1990s campaign of the Muslim Brotherhood. But 
which brand of Islam would be the guiding standard is a matter of controversy, 
ranging from the violent edicts of Osama Bin Laden to the veiled strategy of 
the Brotherhood.

If Islamic theocracy is the answer to all the woes of the Arabs, as many 
Islamists would claim, then it could also lend legitimacy to the concept of 
benign dictatorship. After all, some of the most autocratic Arab theocracies 
claim they are not political rulers, but only guardians of the faith. However, 
benign dictatorship has historically and miserably failed, as was the case in 
Generalissimo Franco's right-wing military rule in Spain and in the communist 
dictatorships of Eastern Europe before the fall of the Berlin Wall. It has been 
tried for decades and continues to be tried in several Arab countries since the 
early 1950s, with a dismal record of failure so far. Theocracy and benign 
dictatorship in the transitional Arab world now, whatever name they may assume, 
is as good as it was for mediaeval Europe before the Renaissance.

It may be possible that constitutional monarchy is in the works for some 
traditional Arab kingdoms or emirates. But for republican regimes the choice is 
more difficult. The central problem is how to introduce the principle of the 
rotation of power as a prerogative of the people and the acceptable norm of 
change for the party in power. This would require unambiguous constitutional 
amendments and a genuine separation of powers, which have so far failed to 
materialise in any Arab country, including Egypt. 

Restive populations in several parts of the Arab world are demanding change as 
a way of improving their social, economic and political status. The regimes in 
power are promising reform, by employing the best and most ambitious 
technocrats, but not change. Seventeen years after the disintegration of the 
former Soviet Union and its one-party political system, the concept of 
"government of the people, by the people, for the people" is still a 
far-fetched dream for those who need it most in the Arab world. The promise of 
improved standards of living is not enough and its success is in doubt. It is 
not by bread alone that man survives, the preamble to the UN Charter, framed 
more than 60 years ago, calling for "Better standards of life in larger 
freedom".

Regimes in most countries of the Arab world distrust their people because they 
have not been the true choice of the people. Most people in the same countries 
are wary of the brutality of their rulers who control every aspect of their 
lives. An historic gap of confidence, and of political thinking, is ever more 
widening. But the lessons of history, for whatever they are worth, are writing 
on the wall for those who may wish to read them.

* The writer is a former correspondent for Al-Ahram in Washington DC. He also 
served as director of the UN Radio and Television in New York.

Reply via email to