By Abdel Monem Said Aly
The
victory of the Libyan revolution, the more-than-cosmetic reforms in Jordan and
Morocco, and the escalation of revolutionary attempts to oust Bashar Assad in
Syria and Ali Abdullah Saleh in Yemen signal that the wind is still blowing in
the sails of the Arab Spring.
However,
the transformation is not easy and the spring is full of sandstorms. In Egypt,
where the revolution has passed the point of overthrowing the regime, the
post-revolution transition period reflects the enormity of the difficulties.
The departure of President Hosni Mubarak launched a new era for the Egyptian revolution
and certainly for Egypt. But by surrendering his powers to the Supreme Council
of the Armed Forces, Mubarak assured the continuity of the state as represented
by three major institutions.
First,
the SCAF represents the sovereign rights of the president and his executive and
legislative powers. Second, the judiciary has been part of the revolution as
the revolutionaries have declared their intent to have a democratic system
based on the rule of law. Third, the bureaucracy is historically the backbone
of the Egyptian state and is continuing its mission under new leadership.
On
the other side are the revolutionaries. First, the youth who launched the
revolution but were soon to lose its leadership have built coalitions and new
political parties. Whatever their numbers, they reflect a highly fragmented
arena. Second, traditional political parties that worked as the formal and
informal opposition to the Mubarak regime have reasserted themselves.
Third,
the Muslim Brotherhood has been reinforced by new “Islamic” parties. On the
more liberal side of the Brotherhood is the “Wasat” or “Middle” party; and on
the more conservative side are the long-imprisoned Islamic and Jihadist groups.
Then there is the new power of the Salafists, who advocate a strict implementation
of Sharia. And fourth are nonparty movements and civil society organizations
that opposed Mubarak and his regime.
The
organs of state and the revolutionary forces devised a slogan that the people
and the army are “one hand.” Diverse revolutionary groups defined the situation
as follows: The people made the revolution but the army protected it. In many
ways this definition of what took place in Egypt recognized the continuity of
the Egyptian state and, simultaneously, the necessity for a process of massive
change. Yet the basis for political change in the country has become an issue
of state under the watchful eyes of the revolution.
Given
this marriage between the continuity of the state and the continuity of the
revolution, it was inevitable that tensions would grow. Local forces have
started taking public affairs into their own hands. Minorities have asserted
their rights and the protests of the prerevolutionary period continue to hinder
the economy.
Clusters
of tension have grown over time. The first is related to what Egypt should do
with the Mubarak regime and the crimes it committed during the revolution.
After considerable tension, the ex-president and his two sons were put on trial
with 48 senior regime members and their families. In a sign of instability, no
fewer than four cabinets were formed between January and July – ironically, all
containing members of the dissolved National Democratic Party.
The
second cluster of tensions has focused on the road to be taken during the
transition period to civilian rule. These tensions were among different
factions of the revolution, and between some of them and the SCAF. While a
portion of the revolutionaries, particularly liberals and those on the left of
the political spectrum, pushed for a kind of steering committee or presidential
council made up of civilians and military personnel to run the affairs of the
country, others – the Islamic organizations plus the nationalists – opted for
allowing the military to run Egypt’s affairs.
The
first group opted for electing a constitutional assembly to draft a new
constitution as a basis for legislative and presidential elections. The second
group opted for a contrary process, one that begins by electing a legislative
branch that will be empowered to select a constitutional council to draft the
new constitution. The SCAF took the initiative and formed a committee to amend
eight articles of the 1971 constitution and put them to a referendum. They were
approved on March 19, 2011, by a majority of 77.8 percent.
These
amendments reduced presidential powers and limited the president to two terms
of four years each. Then the 1971 constitution was replaced by a constitutional
declaration to cover the transition period. The referendum also launched the
transition through the election of two legislative councils. In many ways, the
results of the referendum codified the split in the revolutionary camp.
This
led to the third cluster of tensions, centering around how to deal with the
SCAF. Does the military council represent the political leadership of Egypt,
therefore can it be criticized and held accountable by the public? Or is it
part of the army that should be honored for protecting the country, therefore
constitutes a “red line” that revolutionaries must not cross?
Liberals
and leftists took the first view and accused the SCAF of favoring the
Islamists, who adopted the second view. A new political configuration began
emerging, creating its own dynamic, altering between confrontation and
accommodation. The road map for transition was finally accepted, as was an
Al-Azhar document based on a consensus regarding guidelines for a
constitutional council that will maintain the characteristics of a civil state.
Daily
events also provoked tensions, lately in north Sinai, where Israel accidentally
killed Egyptian soldiers after an attack. While augmentation of the Egyptian
military presence was agreed, the Israeli response to soldiers’ deaths was
considered inconsiderate of Egyptian lives. The situation in Sinai has
reintroduced the Arab-Israel conflict into Egyptian domestic politics after it
had been the president’s domain. This will complicate Egyptian domestic
politics, Egyptian-Israeli and Egyptian-American relations, and the management
of Egyptian national security and foreign policy.
-This commentary was published in The Daily Star on 21/09/2011
-Abdel Monem Said Aly is president of the Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies in Cairo. This commentary first appeared at bitterlemons-international.org, an online newsletter
-Abdel Monem Said Aly is president of the Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies in Cairo. This commentary first appeared at bitterlemons-international.org, an online newsletter
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