Underlying the uprising in Tunisia and the ongoing massive agitation in Egypt
is the rise of the Islamic middle class who quite rightly object to having
their aspirations throttled by authoritarian corruption and economic
monopolies. Such was the self emulating
martyr in Tunisia
who was no illiterate peasant but was a well educated young man and the pride
of a well to do family who sacrificed to see him into university.
They can go on the internet and
see free peoples at work everywhere improving their lives under governments
that have slowly learned to just get out of the way. It is only amazing that it took this long to
get up their courage to hit the bricks.
This is a true revolt against
tyranny. The middle class is not been
advanced in these countries and they will try a new political system to get it
all to work.
At the same time, the lesson of Iran in which
one secular tyranny was replaced by a Islamic tyranny has not been lost
either. The Army everywhere will oppose
such and the democratic process is likely to actually suppress the likes of the
Muslim brotherhood. It will still be nervous times.
Whatever the outcome, all
governments in the Islamic world have been put on notice that they must provide
freedom for the middle class to breath and contribute to the political life of
their countries.
None of this has anything to do
with radical Islam although they will struggle to take advantage of it just as
the communists used to do in days of yore.
In Egypt ,
Mubarak did the obvious and rounded up all the Muslim Brothers leadership and
put them in jail to wait out the revolt. Unfortunately, they were all since sprung and the prison was also emptied.
To really ride out the revolt he
would have to establish a transition electoral program to divert the energy
into electing a representative government.
Doing that has been problematic because autocrats never see their way to
provide a truly workable constitution and the result is usually deeply flawed.
Recall Russia ’s
constitution which still keeps real power away from the elected representatives
long after the original group of thugs went to their graves.
Ideally, Mubarak and the army can
be the midwife to a constitutional assembly whose first order of business is to
provide a constitution. That way the
army and Mubarak can be the guarantors of a successful transition and the block
to the rise of specific factions undemocratic in their objectives such as the
Muslim Brotherhood. Of course the
problem in Pakistan
is that the army has been both undemocratic in its inclinations and a sponsor
of the worst radicalism. Thus such a
role must be transitional.
Far more importantly, the genie
is out of the bottle. Whatever the
actual outcome, the middle class has discovered it has the power to challenge
the autocrat and demand representative government through the modern ability to
communicate with cell phones and twitter. Governments can stall but they cannot
control the dialogue at all.
We now live in a world in which
those secret bribes paid to your bros’ secret bank account can become known to
all your fellow citizens.
The only solution for the
autocrats is to implement representative government as quickly as
possible. Otherwise, mob rule will
challenge them constantly.
Analysis - Egypt 's
Al Jazeera bans channel's key role
By Andrew Hammond
(Reuters) - Egypt 's
decision on Sunday to close the offices of Al Jazeera illustrates the leading
role the Arabic broadcaster has taken in reporting unprecedented popular
revolts against Arab rulers.
But the channel led the coverage of a Tunisian
uprising when it began in late December and toppled Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali on
January 14, even though it was already banned from the North African country.
Then, sensing that Tunisia 's
example would set off copycat movements elsewhere, the channel charted
mobilisation in Egypt
that led to huge protests in the past week demanding the end of President Hosni
Mubarak's rule.
"Al Jazeera saw the gravity of the situation," said Shadi
Hamid of the Brookings Institute in Doha ,
referring to the two revolts. "They saw it was going to be big before
other people did and that it would stand as one of the historic moments in Arab
history."
Arab governments have often closed the offices of the channel, which
helped put tiny Gulf state Qatar
on the map and boosted its status as a leader of regional diplomacy.
A major oil and gas power, Qatar employs vast resources to
back the channel. This month it began a stack of secret documents revealing
embarrassing Palestinian Authority concessions to Israel in peace talks. Emad Gad of
the Al Ahram Strategic and Political Studies Centre said the effort to smother
Al Jazeera was the last effort of a dying authoritarian system to control
events in the traditional heavy-handed manner.
He cited the government's move to completely shut off the Internet and
mobile phone lines on Friday in an effort to stop people gathering.
"Is cutting the Internet or the mobile network in 2011 a solution?
This is equivalent to that. It's the behaviour of a dictatorial state breathing
its last," Gad said.
Social media and mobile phone technology have also been cited as
playing a major role in the street mobilisations of the past month, which
touched Yemen and Jordan
too.
STATE TV TRIES TO HIT BACK
Having ignored the protests for five days, Egyptian state TV has now
focussed on the disorder that erupted after state security forces withdrew from
the streets on Friday rather than ongoing protests against Mubarak.
On Sunday state TV -- which like other Arab official outlets has tried
to modernise to keep up with the Qatari trend-setter -- sniped against the
station saying only a handful of protesters were in central Cairo , "in contrast to the tens of
thousands Al Jazeera talked about."
But Al Jazeera carried images from a still camera of crowds gathering
throughout the day at Tahrir
Square . The station also has a live channel whose
transmission Egypt
tried to block on its Nilesat satellite last week.
"We should have taken steps before with this channel since it has
caused more destruction than Israel
for Egypt ,"
governor of Minya province, Ahmed Diaeddin, raged on state TV. "I call for
the trial of Al Jazeera correspondents as traitors."
Salah Issa, editor the state-owned weekly al-Qahira, said Islamists
often said to dominate Al Jazeera's editorial line were driven by a vendetta
against Mubarak.
Saudi-owned Al Arabiya has been more conservative in covering the Arab
uprisings -- less proactive in covering the protests in the early stage and
quicker to promote a return to stability once concessions are offered.
As'ad AbuKhalil, a politics professor in the United States , wrote on his popular
blogsite Egyptian and Saudi media were both trying discredit the protest
movement.
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