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"Partnership for Reform in the Arab World " Speech of Jack Straw: Presented
at the conference of the Civility Programme on Middle East Reform, held at The
Foreign Policy Centre
London, 3 January 2004
It's a great honour for me to open this first conference of the Civility Programme.I
want to talk today about why modernisation and reform in the Arab world matters
to Britain and to the whole international community. I do so with some humility.
It is not for me or for any Foreign Minister from outside the region to lay
down prescriptions. That would neither be right, nor productive, nor would it
show respect.
I am therefore fully conscious of the sensitivities of this issue. But we are
bound to take an interest in the matter, given that Europe and the Arab world
are neighbours, and our interests in many areas, such as our economies and our
security, are international and inter-dependent.
So I want today to try to correct some of the misperceptions that surround this
complex subject; and to stress the importance of our relations with the Arab
World, and of the need to build a partnership to address this shared agenda,
working with the processes of change already underway. By partnership I mean
one across government, among the international community, and, most important
of all, partnership with Arab governments and peoples themselves.
The world is changing more quickly than at any time in its history. As Arab
leaders themselves have recognised, the challenge, in the Arab world as elsewhere,
is to manage change in a way which preserves the best in society, gives ordinary
people ever-greater freedom and choice while protecting them from violence and
injustice. It is the people of the Arab world who are best placed to understand
the challenges they face, and to decide how best to deal with them. The ideas
must come from our Arab friends. We in Europe or the West cannot and must not
dictate to them; but we can, and will, work with them to support and nurture
reform.
1. The Arab World now matters more than ever
So we in Britain, and in Europe, want the Arab world to be stable and prosperous.
As many in the region recognise, if it falls behind the global trend towards
greater freedoms and development its stability and prosperity will be under
threat. The challenges differ from country to country across the region - but
there are worrying common threads. Regional economic growth is failing to keep
pace with a growing population. In some countries, 60 per cent of the population
is under 18 years of age.
Youth unemployment averages over 50 per cent: according to the World Bank, the
region needs to create 100 million jobs over the next 20 years to provide for
this burgeoning workforce.
The last decades have seen the spread of representative and accountable government
in many parts of the world, but less so in the Middle East. In some Arab countries,
women are prevented from realising their potential in society - which means
that fully half of the population is unable to play its part in economic growth
and social development. Despite impressive gains over the last decades, literacy
rates in some countries are now falling, and fast-growing populations are straining
public services.
Many in the region realise the extent of these challenges and are working for
reform so that they can be addressed more effectively. Many governments have
already taken important steps on economic, social and political reform, and
others are following. And as we heard in the introduction, it was Arab intellectuals
who set out the challenges facing the region in the Arab Human Development Report
of 2002, and the follow-up report published last year. The Declaration issued
by the Sana'a Conference on 12 January was a further important contribution
to the debate, calling among other things for greater empowerment for women,
a strengthening of democracy and pluralism, the effective application of the
rule of law and greater efforts to improve education.
2. Representative Government
I welcome all of that. But as many in the region recognise, much more needs
to be done - and with a sense of urgency. Governments and peoples are talking
about the need for more open, participative and representative government supported
by a stronger civil society; for action to make the rule of law effective and
transparent; for greater respect for human rights; for economic reform to create
jobs and stimulate growth; for improved standards of education, in order to
prepare young people for life and work in the twenty-first century; and for
imaginative changes to enable women really to fulfil their potential in society.
No-one imagines this will be either quick or simple. As I said at the outset
of this speech, we in Europe should always show some humility about the pace
of change; after all, representative government is a very recent phenomenon
in 11 of the 25 EU states, and the whole of our continent suffered the twin
traumas of fascism and communism in the last century. It is not for us to preach.
It is for the Arab world itself to decide how best it can pursue a process of
reform, development and modernisation. There is no template which fits each
of the different countries in the region. The task for us in Britain and in
the international community is to help to support it, drawing on our own experience
of change - because we too have a vital interest in its success.
We need to recognise that this is a complex and sensitive subject. The pace
of change is going to vary between different countries and regions, as it has
in the EU. Change may be necessary, but it is never easy, and it can be seen
as a threat to deeply-held beliefs and traditions. Moreover, history has left
some in the Arab world with a perhaps understandable distrust of Western motives.
All that means that we must start by correcting some of the misperceptions and
myths which have arisen, both in the Arab world and elsewhere, around this subject.
Of course these misperceptions are by no means universal - but they do need
correcting, so as not to become obstacles on the path to reform.
3. Change is possible
The first myth is that Islam is in its very nature incompatible with change.
I reject that notion entirely. It seems to me that resistance to change comes
not from Islam itself, but from those who claim religious justification for
clinging to outmoded traditions. Christian societies in the West had to evolve
in order to meet the challenges and problems that arose in a changing world.
The moderate Islamic community has shown the same capacity to let society evolve.
By contrast, extremism in any religion is not only a block on necessary change;
it also feeds off those who are marginalised in society, to breed intolerance
and resentment which in its turn can fuel violence. Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia,
Algeria and Morocco have suffered, at least as much as some European countries,
at the hands of terrorists who pervert a peaceful religion to spread destruction
and hate.
We all have a shared interest in defeating these extremists; which means we
also have a shared interest in building the kind of pluralist, stable and tolerant
societies which are the best bulwarks against extremism and violence. There
are deeply-rooted traditions of consultation and consensus within Islam that
make it far from incompatible with progressive change towards more open and
participative government.
If I can be allowed one historical suggestion, the concept of Shura - or consultation
- was established far earlier than in the Christian world. Indeed there is nothing
in Arab culture which makes change impossible - the region has in some senses
changed beyond recognition over the last decades. Only 907 boys attended school
in Oman in 1970; today about 600,000 boys and girls do so. Dubai had little
or no modern infrastructure before the 1970s; today it is a thriving, ultramodern
transport and trade hub. Egypt has transformed itself from a state-controlled
to a largely free-enterprise economy. And free speech and a free media have
operated for many years in parts of the Arab world. (One of the great things
that has happened in Iraq is that instead of state-controlled media there is
now a burgeoning independent press which is contributing to change and political
debate.)Arab societies have adjusted to change, and will continue to do so.
4. Promoting values within traditional cultures
But even those who accept that change is right and inevitable sometimes argue
that it can come only at the expense of religious and traditional values - that
reform will necessarily breed individualism and the degradation of a traditional
and devout way of life.
Again, the evidence shows this to be another misperception. Countries all around
the world have managed to evolve towards pluralist and representative government
without rejecting religion. Let me come back to the example of Europe. There
is hardly a country in Europe without a Christian Democratic Party. A number
of European countries accord a formal status within their constitutional arrangements
to the church - as is the case within the UK for the Church of England and the
Church of Scotland.
In the United States, where separation of church and state is a constitutional
principle, large percentages of the population attend church regularly and cite
religion as a central part of their daily lives. Pluralism and tolerance allow
religion to flourish, as they have done for the over 2 million Muslims who practise
their religion in Britain today. My own constituency has 25 mosques in it and
I live opposite a madrasah. Indeed I am particularly proud of the fact that
the Foreign Office every year sends a delegation to the Holy Places to offer
support, consular help and medical treatment to the over 20,000 British Muslims
performing Hajj. It is one example of the close partnership we have with British
Muslim communities.
Promoting the values we believe in - good governance, human rights, tolerance
and the rule of law - is not an attempt to impose 'Western' or 'Christian' values
on Arab countries at the expense of their traditional culture. The values set
out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights are just that - universal,
and drawn from the traditions and values of countries around the world. They
are values for which people around the world strive; and which are compatible
with every single faith in the world. We want to see them fully realised everywhere.
Change does not have to come at the expense of the unique traditional culture
which those in the region prize. Japan is no less Japanese today for having
embraced democracy after the second world war. Indeed adapting to a changing
world environment is the best route to ensuring that the Arab world's unique
culture and identity can continue to prosper, and exert a greater influence
for the good on us in the West. Without change, the build-up of political disillusion
and economic stagnation can only threaten what Arabs hold so dear.
In recent years several Arab countries have struggled successfully with challenges
to their immediate stability. I suggest that the new challenge is that of longer-term
change. Change is in any case inevitable and therefore the choice is one between
managed and unmanaged change.
There are risks involved in any reform. But the risks of doing nothing are far
greater.
Reform will not come overnight - it will take place over the period of a generation,
and it must proceed at a pace which societies can bear. Like all change, it
will not be easy. We in the West need to support our Arab friends in every way
we can as they lead the process of change in their countries.
We need to work in partnership to address this shared agenda. Indeed that is
for me the key to this whole issue: partnerships across government and within
the international community; and, most important, partnerships with Arab governments
and institutions themselves.
5. A role for Britain and the International Community
Britain can play an important role. Our imperial past has left some understandable
sensitivities in parts of the Arab world. But our history has also given us
a network of friendships across North Africa and the Middle East, and an understanding
of the region. We can offer our expertise in adapting to a changing world, for
example on educational standards, legal reform, the participation of women,
market regulation or youth policy.
But whatever we do in Britain, we need international partnerships to achieve
our aims.
For Britain, working through the EU will be crucial. The European Security Strategy
endorsed last December makes the Middle East a priority - and rightly so. The
EU is already strongly engaged. The so-called 'MEDA' programme of aid totals
around 700 million per year; the Barcelona Process and our partnership with
the GCC give us frameworks for closer partnership; and bilateral Association
Agreements link us even more closely to individual countries in the region.
We now need to use these instruments more coherently and effectively to promote
our shared goals for example by focusing MEDA funds on our strategic objectives,
and deepening the relationship with the Gulf states through the EU-GCC dialogue.
The new European Neighbourhood Policy should also give us new opportunities
to build partnerships for reform in the region. We need to work first of all
with those countries which have shown a clear wish to reform; and we need to
make sure the partnerships include conditions by which both sides are prepared
to abide.
The United States will also have a crucial role. We in Europe should make clear
that we share America's recognition of the need for reform, but that we need
to work closely together and with the Arab world to ensure we get our approach
right. The G8 also can also play an important part. For example we have put
forward a suggestion for the G8 to work with business and with Arab governments
to identify and reduce barriers to trade and investment, and to deepen local
financial markets. The UN too has much to offer, and UN bodies have the expertise,
resources and legitimacy which are necessary for success. NATO should also be
able to offer help in some areas, for example closer cooperation in the fight
against terrorism, proliferation and smuggling.
So the international community has the will and the ability to help those in
the region to manage a process of change. But we must match our common engagement
in support of reform with renewed international efforts to make progress in
resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Both sides have suffered far too
much, and the Palestinians are still without the state which is their right.
We continue to urge both sides to uphold international law and human rights.
Despite the difficulties of the situation, and the mistrust and hatred which
it can breed on both sides, I also want to encourage greater understanding and
mutual respect between Islam and Judaism. One of the fascinating things for
me as a Christian, brought up with the Old and New Testaments, is when I attend
Islamic ceremonies and listen to the recitation of the Koran. I am struck not
by the differences in the messages of our respective holy prophets but by the
similarities.
We cannot let the violence in Israel and Palestine be a block on the process
of change which the region needs. But equally, we have to recognise, quite aside
from its terrible human cost, that the continuing conflict makes change only
more difficult than it already is, and clouds the whole relationship between
the Islamic world and the West.
As long as the current stalemate continues, the situation in Palestine will
be cited by many to argue that a region still in conflict needs stability, not
reform. Getting Israelis and Palestinians to re-engage on the Road Map is vital,
not just for their own sake, but for the process of change in the whole region.
A new Palestinian state could be a leading example of reform in the Arab world.
Even under uniquely difficult circumstances, Palestinians have shown in the
past a genuine thirst for free institutions and education.
Both on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and on reform in the region, our international
partnerships will play an important role. But I want to emphasise again that
our most important partnerships for reform must be with Arab peoples and governments
themselves.
To take the example of the Foreign Office's own programme for engaging with
the Islamic World, we have sought to make central in the development of our
Global Opportunities Fund, the principle of partnerships with Arab societies
and institutions.
So for example we are working with Saudi Chambers of Commerce to organize seminars
on accession to the World Trade Organisation. In Egypt we are backing a programme
for legal training in human rights and civil liberties cases: this is particularly
timely as Egypt has just established its own high-level Human Rights Council.
In Yemen, we are funding a management and leadership training course for businesswomen.
These are just a very few examples of projects we are supporting - but they
demonstrate how we are working in partnership with local organisations, responding
to the demands of local people.
Conclusion
As many of these projects show, there is now a recognition across the region,
and around the world, of the need for reform in the Arab world to meet the daunting
challenges it faces.
Arab governments now have a great opportunity to take the lead by setting out
a vision for long-term change, and mobilising their people behind it.
It is not for me, or anyone in the West to tell the Arab world exactly how that
vision should look. But the international community can do a great deal to support
Arabs in the necessary process of change.
We need now to strengthen our shared commitment to partnerships for reform with
the Arab world, based on strong foundations of friendship, understanding and
mutual interest. Reform will be difficult; and it will take time. So we must
not only engage now: we must also, over the coming years, stand by that commitment
and further strengthen our shared engagement.
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