By
Gwynne Dyer
28.12.20
Ten years
ago this month, Mohamed Bouazizi, a street vendor in Tunisia, set himself
alight in front of a government building in rage at the corrupt dictatorship
that had ruined his young life. His sacrifice wakened hope in millions of
others — but then half a million of them also died, although not at their own
hands, and the rest went quiet. It was called the Arab Spring. It should have
worked. Non-violent democratic revolutions had overthrown around two dozen
other tyrannies in the previous 20 years. So when people in half a dozen Arab
dictatorships, galvanized by Bouazizi’s action, went out in the streets to
demand democracy in late 2010 and 2011, most onlookers expected them to win.
In reality,
they all lost, except in Tunisia. In Egypt the protesters forced the old
dictator to quit, but the army was back in power in less than two years. In
Syria, Yemen and Libya, the protests morphed into savage civil wars that continue
even today. Smaller protests in Lebanon and Bahrain were shut down by force.
This is not because the whole non-violent technique is falling out of favour.
There are non-violent attempts to remove dictators underway right now in
Thailand and Belarus, both with a reasonable chance of success.
So what’s
wrong with the Arab world, where only four out of 22 countries are classed as
‘free’ or ‘partly free’ by Freedom House? Here’s one possible answer.
Everywhere else, the political choice is binary: tyranny or democracy. In most
of the Arab countries there are three choices: the dreadful status quo or
democracy — or Islam. In every Arab country there is an Islamist opposition
promising that ‘Islam is the answer’.
The right
answer depends on what the question is. As a non-Arab and non-Muslim I am not
setting the questions, just observing that in the Arab world, unlike elsewhere,
two alternative escape routes are on offer to the public. Both have
considerable popular appeal, but they are mutually exclusive. Equality and its
political expression, democracy, are human values, but for historical reasons
it is easy for Islamists to portray political democracy as an alien, ‘Western’
value. This is the fault line that the dictators exploit.
That’s why
the first thing the Syrian dictator, Bashar al-Assad, did when the
pro-democracy protests began was to free several thousand Islamist activists
from his prisons. Rival sets of enemies out in the streets are far better than
a united opposition. It led to a 10-year civil war that has driven half the
population into exile, but Assad is still in power today. The Egyptian army was
subtler. It let its old, discredited leader go under, knowing that a free
election would bring the Islamists to power because most voters were rural and
socially conservative. The military calculated that the urban young who made
the revolution would be dismayed and seek the army’s help when the Islamists
began forcing their values on the country. That’s exactly what happened, and
the new dictator, General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, then massacred about four
thousand Islamists on the streets of Cairo. Variants of this scenario played
out in other Arab countries with more or less violence, and only Tunisia
managed to create a lasting (so far) democracy.
This is not
uniquely an Arab problem, of course. Iran has been an Islamist theocracy for 40
years, and Turkey’s once lively democracy has been slowly strangled in Recep
Tayyip Erdogan’s 17 years in power. But as the distance from the Arab heartland
grows, so do the prospects for democracy. Pakistan manages to be a (quite
corrupt) democracy about half the time, Bangladesh and Malaysia are
quasi-democratic all the time, and Indonesia is a full-fledged, full-service
democracy. These four countries account for almost half the world’s Muslims;
African Muslims don’t seem to have particular problems with democracy either.
The problem
resides in the Arab world, where the political climate has only two seasons:
brief springs and very long winters. It may not be an insoluble problem, but
there’s certainly no solution in sight.
Original
Headline: Unique problem with Arab World
Source: The Telegraph India
URL: https://newageislam.com/the-war-within-islam/political-climate-arab-world-brief/d/123899
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