|
JANUARY 05 NEWSLETTER
[back to newsletter
page]
Mubarak’s War on Egyptian Liberals
Saad Eddin Ibrahim
For nearly a quarter century, President Hosny Mubarak has ruled
the pivotal country of Egypt as a modern day pharaoh. In ancient
times the pharaoh was propagated by the priesthood as a God-King
with absolute power over the lives of his subjects and their sole
means of livelihood, the river Nile. The pharaoh was not accountable
to any authority. Today’s Mubarak is the same and even more.
He enjoys the largess of the US and other western donors from whom
his regime has been getting more than $3 billion annually. How has
Mubarak managed to do that?
At home, Mubarak created a huge internal security force, over one
million in number, nearly three times the size of the Egyptian army.
Some of its units--mainly the Central Security Forces and The Republican
Guard -- are equipped with the latest from western arsenals. Mubarak
justified this in the aftermath of the assassination of President
Sadat in October of 1981, citing the need to confront his Islamic
militant threat. Few inside the country or abroad questioned his
sincerity at the time nor did they object when he simultaneously
imposed a State of Emergency. Equally, Mubarak inherited a reservoir
of foreign good will which the late Anwar Sadat had accumulated.
Western capitols, especially Washington, were more than eager to
give Mubarak all the political and economic support he needed to
quash Islamic militants and to stay the course on the peace process
with Israel.
By the end of the 1980’s, the militant threat had greatly
subsided and the peace process was at a standstill. Butros Ghali,
then Egypt,s State Minister of Foreign Affairs, described the latter
as a “cold peace”. Meanwhile, external debt was sky-rocketing
despite all the generous foreign aid and billions in remittances
sent home by Egyptians working abroad, due to flagrant mismanagement
and rampant corruption. Polite, then candid, and finally blunt warnings
from international institutions over the need for reform fell on
deaf ears in the Mubarak regime. But then first Gulf War with Iraq
came as a reprieve for Mubarak. He lined up with the US-led coalition
that was skillfully put together by a more seasoned Bush. After
the war was successfully concluded, the Mubarak regime was bailed
out of its debt crisis by the cancellation of half of its overdue
loans –over $24 billion --and rescheduling of the rest.
Despite several years of economic revival which followed in the
1990’s, the political scene remained stagnant, and the peace
process had fallen into a deep freeze by the end of 2000. Mubarak’s
role along with that of Saudi Crown Prince Abdulla in discouraging
Yasser Arafat from accepting the Camp David deal brokered by President
Bill Clinton has and will be debated for years. Even the economic
gains of the 1990’s soon quickly eroded. Budding liberal forces
raised steady demands for political reform, not only for the sake
of good governance, but also to recoup economic losses and restore
the comfidence of foreign investors. The latter’s incoming
capital had sagged from $3 billion annually in mid-1990’s
to a mere 300 million. The fact that the masterminds behind the
9/11 attacks, Ayman Zawahery and Mohamed Atta ,were Egyptians dramatized
the dismal failure of the Mubarak regime before the world.
Finally, the domestic voices calling for change were joined by
external counterparts.
Feeling cornered, unable to effect the demanded reforms without
power sharing and opening up the system, Mubarak opted for a dual
strategy of repression at home and stone-walling vis-à-vis
external pressures, especially that coming from the US. The calculation
was that a change in the White House or a failure in Iraq might
get him off the hook. If that didn’t materialize, the Mubarak
regime thought it might still bargain a way out by playing a more
constructive role in bringing the Israelis and Palestinians together,
and by providing a standing service of torturing terrorist suspects
for US intelligence.
But the other part of the strategy at home is an all out war on
Egypt’s small contingent of liberals. They are calling for
constitutional reforms that would make the choice of the president
a direct competitive election instead of a referendum on a single
candidate and they want a maximum limit of two five-year presidential
terms. The reformists have also demanded an end to 24 years of a
State of Emergency, ending the State monopoly over the mass media,
press freedoms and the right to freely establish political parties
and civil society organizations.
Small in number as these liberal forces may be, five of them recently
declared their intentions to become candidates for the upcoming
presidential election. They are daring Mubarak to respond positively
to the demand for constitutional amendments so they can challenge
him through the ballot box. In recent weeks, these reformists stepped
up the pressure, encouraged by the Palestinian and Iraqi elections
which some of them participated in as observers. The Egyptian Popular
Movement for Change (EPMC) has defiantly organized rallies, marches
and demonstrations. Though the participants were initially in the
hundreds, they were encircled by thousands of armed security forces.
If foreign media were present, the police would be self-restrained,
confining themselves to intimidation tactics.
But as these acts of collective protest grew, the regime’s
nerves got more edgy. Three signs of this were displayed recently.
A prominent journalist, Reda Hillal of Al-Ahram newspaper was kidnapped
from his apartment in a Cairo suburb and has not been heard from
since. Close associates claim that his forced disappearance is due
to statements made by Hillal about young Gamal Mubarak, who is being
groomed to succeed his father. The second episode was more bizarre
and directed against the Executive Editor of Al-Araby opposition
newspaper, A. H. Kandil, who has been fiercely vocal against Mubarak
running for a fifth six-year term. Kandil was abducted late at night
by four masked men, taken in an unmarked van to an isolated desert
area 50 miles outside Cairo, where he was stripped naked, beaten
and abandoned. He wandered until finding a military police unit
that administered first aid, gave him clothing and contacted his
family. As details of the story became known, public opinion was
outraged and Egypt’s Press Syndicate deplored the incident,
demanding an immediate investigation. When the Government dragged
its feet on the matter, several voices in the opposition papers
and on independent Arab satellite networks, began to point accusing
fingers at Mubarak directly.
But the latest and most flagrant assault on democracy activists
was on January 29th, when
Egypt’s rubber-stamp Parliament was convened in an emergency
session in order to suspend the parliamentary immunity of one of
its members, Ayman Nour. He had not been notified of any wrongdoing
or of a request to suspend immunity before hand. The regime justified
its request by the need to investigate allegations of forgeries
related to the registration of the Al-Ghad Party, which Nour heads.
The session was over in less than 30 minutes. As Nour was leaving
the Parliament building, he was arrested by the notorious State
Security Agency. With unprecedented judicial speed, a prosecution
order was issued detaining Nour, not for the normal four or the
unusual 14 days pending interrogation, but for 45 days without bail.
Again, the opposition and much of the public are up in arms.
Mubarak’s wrath this time is attributed by the English language
Al Ahram Weekly (Feb.10) to a meeting Nour and other party members
had with former US Secretary of State Madeline Albright and Congressman
Ben Weber, during a fact-finding visit for the Council on Foreign
Relations, and because of his active lobbying in parliament to amend
the Constitution. The Mubarak regime is quite touchy about both
matters. They are keen on presenting Egypt to the West as having
only two alternatives: a Mubarak or the Islamists. With people like
Ayman Nour and his new but fast-growing Al-Ghad Party, a third peaceful
liberal alternative was looming on the horizon for all to see. That
is why Mubarak is determined to eliminate Egypt’s liberals.
But fortunately history will not be on his side this time.
|