New president in Egypt: Implications for
political Islam
Tuesday July 03, 2012 08:30:08 PM,
C. Uday Bhaskar,
IANS
|
|
|
Egypt, land of the Nile, splendour
of the pharaohs and now remembered through the majestic pyramids
is birthplace of one of the oldest civilizations of the world. It
marked a historic event June 30 when Mohamed Morsi was sworn in as
the first democratically elected president of his country in
Cairo. The long three decade Hosni Mubarak era has come to a
symbolic end with the assumption of office by Morsi - a former
Muslim Brotherhood leader who represents the common man of Egypt -
in contrast to the kings and military dictators who ruled Egypt
for the last century.
The question that has been repeatedly raised within Egypt and
beyond since the Morsi victory was declared is: what kind of
democracy is Egypt likely to give unto itself with the current
leadership, which is rooted in the ideology and objectives of the
Muslim Brotherhood (MB), an Islamic party that was formed in 1928
as part of the anti-colonial movement. The central tenet of the
Brotherhood at the time was to promote adherence to the tenets of
Islamic sharia law in Egypt, even while working with the under
privileged population as part of their social and charitable
agenda.
The anti-British orientation of the MB led to their supporting the
Nazi cause during World War II and this in turn led to the seeds
of both anti-Zionism and recourse to terror techniques to thwart
the British in Palestine and elsewhere. Post World War II, the MB
pursued its Islamic agenda and defiance of the ruling regime in
Cairo and was implicated in the 1948 assassination of the Egyptian
prime minister Mahmud Fahmi Nokrashi.
Subsequently with the beginning of military rule in Egypt (1952)
led by then Colonel Nasser that overthrew the monarchy, the MB was
marginalized in the power structure of the country. The military's
secular, socialist ideology was at variance with what the
Brotherhood espoused and after the failed 1954 assassination
attempt on Nasser, the MB was abolished. The leadership of this
vast organization was imprisoned and the cadres forced to go
underground - and this pattern, with a varying degrees of leniency
continued through the Nasser-Sadat-Mubarak years.
Thus the swearing in of a MB member as the president is an event
of near tectonic proportion in the annals of Egyptian history but
the implications of this for the trajectory of political Islam in
its post 9/11 context are opaque and cause for both concern and
reflection.
While there are many anomalies about the swearing in - which was
preceded by Morsi's public address at Tahrir Square Friday (June
29) - the reality is that the powerful Egyptian military has
dissolved parliament and retained most of the actual control of
the state. Complex negotiations will be held to work out the power
distribution between the elected president and the uniformed
fraternity.
While President Morsi has reiterated that Cairo's external
policies and treaties will be respected - meaning the peace accord
with Israel - it is evident that relations with the US, Turkey,
Saudi Arabia and Iran will be reviewed. The weakened economy is in
need of deft political and professional handling - and will be the
single most important indicator for the average Egyptian who is
now overcome with fatigue after an extended cycle of elections and
protests.
It is the internal dynamic and divisions that will challenge the
Morsi leadership - the co-relation with the military; finding a
modus vivendi with the former Mubarak faction that won almost half
the votes in the election; and assuaging the concerns of the youth
in Egypt who formed the core of the Tahrir demonstrations and who
do not want a return to the past or a conservative, stifling Islam
to restrict them. The gender issue and the status of women in the
new political Islam of Egypt could prove to be an early indicator
of where the Morsi regime proposes to take Egypt.
Reviewing the various statements made by President Morsi - both in
the election campaign and in the run-up to the swearing in
Saturday, what is discernible is an attempt by the new Egyptian
president to be all things to all people - meaning that he is
seeking to endear himself to the vast Islamic constituency within
Egypt - the support-base of the MB and reach out to his political
opponents and the minorities - the Coptic Christians in
particular.
Whether this is pragmatic politics or tactical opportunism will be
evident within the next few months as the new regime in Cairo
begins to deal with a range of challenges - both external and
internal.
The MB victory in Egypt also signifies the arrival of the first
Islamic party using the ballot-box to come to power in a major
Sunni dominated nation and this could be as significant as the
Iranian Revolution of 1979 which saw the advent of political Shia
Islam.
Given Egypt's historical role as the leader of Arab politics and
learning, the politico-religious ideology that will be advanced by
the Morsi regime will be critical not just for the Arab world -
but for the extended Islamic belt including South Asia.
If the new Egypt decides to revert to the more conservative and
intolerant interpretation of Islam that has shown its virulence in
Pakistan and Afghanistan with active support from Saudi Arabia,
the possibility that this kind of political Islam will gain
ascendancy is more likely. In the event, the Muslim Brotherhood
will be going back to its original objective of implementing the
Islamic sharia in Egypt and extending this to the rest of the
region.
But for a party that has defied authority and power since its
birth and adopted a revisionist agenda, the Muslim Brotherhood has
become that very symbol of authority and power and the deeper
challenge will be to see if Morsi's political Islam can nurture
into a more inclusive and tolerant governing ethos. At this point
the optimism will have to remain muted though the hope generated
in Cairo is high and infectious.
C. Uday Bhaskar is a well-known strategic analyst.
He can be reached at cudayb@gmail.com
|
Home |
Top of the Page
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Top Stories |
Mukherjee's nomination for presidential poll accepted
The
nomination of United Progressive Alliance candidate Pranab
Mukherjee for the presidential poll was accepted Tuesday and the
plea by his opponent P.A Sangma »
Cancel Pranab's candidature, says Sangma;
Cong dismisses allegation
Patnaik accuses Pranab of buying support
|
|
Most Read |
Once
there was Hindutva Terror...?
It is difficult to believe the manner in which the mass murderer
called Brahmeshwar Singh was glorified and the state turning mute
spectator to indiscriminate violence unleashed by his supporters
(mainly
»
|
Darkness in US amid unrelenting heat
Three days after a ferocious summer storm, about
1.7 million people, from the capital city of Washington through 10
states from Indiana to Delaware, are still without electricity
even as they battle unrelenting heat. Making up more than half of
those knocked
»
Millions of Americans battle blistering heat
without power |
|
News Pick |
PM announces Rs.500 crore for flood-hit Assam
Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh Monday announced an aid package of Rs.500
crore for Assam, which has been severely hit by floods, causing an
estimated
»
Northeast floods render 75,000 homeless, relief stepped up |
Muslims, Christians slam German
court ruling on circumcision
A key German Muslim association and top Christian clerics on June
27 sharply criticised a German Court ruling that said circumcising
boys on religious grounds amounted to grievous bodily harm.
» |
Still 'chasing the monsoon' to lift India's fortune
No other weather phenomenon, perhaps, captures the attention of
Indians as does monsoon, a shortfall of which can not just send
the economy reeling, and people sweating, but also alter the
fortunes of governments
» |
Spain wins Euro 2012 final, smashing Italy 4-0
Spain won the Euro 2012 championship here Sunday, trouncing a
valiant, but outmatched, Italy 4-0. The victory makes Spain the
first team in history to win three major
» |
|
Picture of the Day |
|
The Aligarh
Muslim University (AMU) students with the world's largest
envelope they put on display on May 02, 2012. The envelope
earned the premium Institution a place in the Guinness Book of
World Records. AMU received a certificate in this regard on
June 28, 2012. |
|
|
|
|