guardian.co.uk,
Peter Beaumont, foreign affairs editor, Saturday 3 December 2011
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| Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood believes women have a role in politics but wants the state to be influenced by sharia law. Photograph: SIPA/Rex Features |
Among the
potent symbols of the Arab spring is one that has been less photographed and
remarked on than the vast gatherings in Tahrir Square. It has been the
relocation of the offices of the Muslim Brotherhood, the once banned party, now
set to take the largest share of seats in Egypt's new parliament.
Before May
this year they were to be found in shabby rooms in an unremarkable apartment
block on Cairo's Gezira Island, situated behind an unmarked door. These days
the Brotherhood is to be found in gleaming new accommodation in the Muqatam
neighbourhood, in a dedicated building prominently bearing the movement's logo
in Arabic and English.
Welcome to
the age of "political Islam", which may prove to be one of the most
lasting legacies of the Arab spring. It is not only in Egypt that an
unprecedented Islamist political moment is playing out. In the recent Tunisian
elections the moderate Islamist Ennahda party was the biggest winner, while
Morocco has elected its first Islamist prime minister, Abdelilah Benkirane.
In Yemen
and Libya, too, it seems likely that political Islam will define the shape of
the new landscape.
None of
which should be at all surprising. Indeed, if elections in Egypt and Tunisia
had been held at any other time in the past two decades, the same result would
almost certainly have ensued, reflecting both the levels of organisation of
Ennahda and the Brotherhood and the countries' cultural, economic and social
dynamics.
"It
was a change that was supposed to happen a long time ago," says Omar
Ashour, who lectures on the subject of political Islam at Exeter University and
is currently in Cairo.
So what,
precisely, does the rise of electoral Islamist politics mean for the Middle
East and North Africa?
"Islamism
is a term that has been used to describe two very different trends," wrote
Maha Azzam, an associate fellow at Chatham House, in a recent paper on the
implications of the Arab spring for British foreign policy earlier this year.
"First,
[it describes] the non-violent quest for an Islamic-friendly society based on
the 'principles of Islam', which can involve a more liberal application of
Islamic teachings and tradition or a more strict interpretation. Second,
Islamism is also associated with violent extremism, most notably that of
al-Qaida in the promotion of terrorism."
Azzam, like
a number of experts, is firm in the belief that, if the Arab spring has
demonstrated anything about Islamism today, it is how those cleaving to the
second, violent definition have become ever more marginalised in the Arab
world.
Speaking to
the Observer last week, Azzam said that, while it was "too early to
say" how the policies of the Islamist parties thrown to the forefront of
the Arab spring would play out in the region's present transformation, Islamist
parties, for now at least, were looking to the centre.
"In
Tunisia, Ennahda was always more open-minded and with a more liberal attitude
towards secular politics. Now we have the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt leaning
more towards the centre."
In Tunisia
there has been a firm disavowal by the founder of Ennahda, Rachid Ghanouchi, of
the Iranian theocratic model in favour of the Turkish one – represented by the
moderate Islamist AKP of President Abdullah Gül and the prime minister, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan.
While it
has its critics, that Turkish Islamist model has seen an essentially pragmatic
approach to the country's largely secular institutions that has sought to avoid
conflict with the military while attempting to raise both living standards and
the economy.
If the
example of Turkey is seen as a way forward, the case of the Muslim Brotherhood
in Egypt vividly illustrates the huge challenges facing the newly resurgent
Islamist parties as they attempt to govern. "It has learned from what
happened in Algeria and also in Gaza with Hamas's conflict with the west,"
said Ashour.
Despite
that, he believes that the Brotherhood will have to negotiate a difficult
period of democratic transition in which the generals cling on to "power
but not legitimacy" and its political arm, the Freedom and Justice party,
dominates the new parliament with a "popular mandate but little
power".
Shadi
Hamid, of the Brookings Doha Centre, has suggested strongly that the
Brotherhood will concentrate on economic and social policies, rather than
religious and cultural rhetoric.
The Freedom
and Justice party, which includes a minority of Christian Copts, has gone out
of its way to say it seeks a constitution that respects Muslims and
non-Muslims, will not impose Islamic law and is committed to a pluralistic and
democratic Egypt.
In the
midst of this challenge, and with Egypt's economy on the floor, the Brotherhood
will operate in an entirely new political landscape, where a strong showing in
the polls by the more fundamentalist Salafist al-Nour party exerts a
gravitational pull on one side, while liberal secularists and Egypt's middle
classes and business community push for their own agenda.
It is this,
perhaps, that explains the somewhat contradictory pick-and-mix affair that is
the Freedom and Justice party's "manifesto" as revealed in statements
and releases – designed to appeal to as wide an audience as possible.
It insists
it has no objection to women and Christians standing for any government
position except the presidency.
Economically,
the party appears to be attempting to steer a middle course. It supports free
markets and private ownership, while insisting that the state needs to provide
protection for underprivileged groups and asking trade unions to desist from
action that might damage the country's fragile economy.
In the most
controversial areas of sharia law and women's rights, the Brotherhood has
insisted that women should participate in politics, while the state should be a
"civil one", led neither by the military nor clerics, but informed by
the "makased" – the underlying objectives of sharia.
Maha Azzam
also believes they will face "external pressures" that will affect
how their policies and identity develop. "If there was an attack on Iran,
for instance, we might see a more radical voice. The same goes if the Muslim
Brotherhood feels as though it is being ostracised by the west. And at home
they have huge problems ahead as well. The economy is a huge problem."
Despite all this, Azzam believes, the Brotherhood has recognised the need to
make incremental progress.
"They
want a civilian society and they don't want Scaf [the military junta], but they
are saying: 'One step at a time'. They are playing it extremely well, which is
in keeping with their approach and strategy. It is what allowed them to survive
for so long. It is not just that they are adaptive, they have a goal in
mind."
All of
which, as journalist Issandr El Amrani wrote in the wake of the election
results in Egypt on his Arabist blog, "has profoundly depressed most
educated, middle-class Cairenes … who had hoped that the overthrow of Hosni
Mubarak would be followed by a relatively liberal democracy that would be
inclusive of moderate Islamists.
"Among
my Egyptian friends (most decidedly on the liberal side) there is now
tremendous worry about a future in which politics is ruled on the one hand by
identitarian Islamist politics and on the other by a populist,
hyper-nationalistic army. I don't think it has to be so, and we could very well
see a transition to a democratic (but not liberal) system which allows for
rotation of power.
"Personally,"
Amrani concludes, "I think that there can be a positive outcome here: if
the Muslim Brothers are serious about consolidating electoral democracy and
work hard on addressing that issue, there will be other elections for those
that disagree with their conservative views (or foreign policy, or economic
liberalism) to make their case."
THE
ISLAMIST WAVE
EGYPT The
Muslim Brotherhood is in line to win 40% of votes. It is religiously
conservative, but rejects violence while insisting on the need for a transition
to civilian rule. It hopes to form a unity government with more liberal
parties.
MOROCCO The
Justice and Development party elected last month models itself on Turkey's
moderate Islamist government, describing its politics as a "progressive
approach to Islam" focusing on social justice and economic issues.
TUNISIA The
Ennahda party says its model is Turkey's AKP, which was itself influenced by
the writings in exile of Ennahda founder Rachid Ghanouchi. Won 40% of seats in
recent elections. Opposed to sharia law and rejects comparisons with Saudi
Arabia and Iran or with the Taliban.
TURKEY
Turkey's AKP, or Justice and Development party, led by prime minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan (right), is a model for Islamist movements. It has overseen an
economic resurgence. It insists it is non-confessional and democratic, but
critics say it harbours an Islamist agenda.
YEMEN
Al-Islah, the main Islamist opposition party, has been locked in conflict with
forces loyal to President Ali Abdullah Saleh. It makes up 40% of the Joint
Meeting party, a coalition of opposition groups. Critics fear it would herald
a fundamentalist Yemen.
LIBYA The
new National Gathering for Freedom, Justice and Development – named with a nod
towards Turkey's Justice and Development party – was formed in November. Likely
to garner broad support.
Related Article:
"Healing the Military Energies in our family Tree" – Jun 13, 2011 (Kryon channelled by David Brown)
“ … There’s much violence and anger throughout the world; when we look at the Middle East, we can see that changes are coming there. The West has a lot of power over the Middle East, but that power will begin to dissolve. The Muslim people of this world will begin to have their own power, and their own prosperity, and they will begin to disconnect from the Western World. This disconnection doesn’t have to be violent as violence only happens when somebody hangs onto what doesn’t belong to them....
... What Military Energy means if we use an analogy: it would be like putting grinding paste into the oil of your motor car. Once you release these energies you will begin to feel lighter as you disconnect from this reality, and, you will find it easier and easier to release any other negative emotions. Military Energies are the core of all your problems...."

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