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Protests
Hint at New Chapter in Egyptian Politics
Tamir Moustafa
(Tamir Moustafa
is assistant professor of political science at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison. He recently returned from Cairo.)
April 9, 2004
| Further
Info
For background
on Egyptian politics, see Mona El-Ghobashy, "Egypt's
Summer of Discontent," Middle East Report Online,
September 18, 2003.
For a
report on the March 2003 demonstrations, see Paul Schemm,
"Egypt
Struggles to Control Anti-War Protest," Middle East
Report Online, March 31, 2003.
For additional
analysis of street politics in Egypt, see Asef Bayat, "The
'Street' and the Politics of Dissent," in Middle
East Report 226 (Spring 2003). The article is accessible online.
Subscribe
to Middle East Report, or order back issues, via a secure
server at MERIP's home page. |
The
week marking the first anniversary of the US-led invasion of Iraq
saw a flurry of demonstrations across Egypt. A protest in central
Cairo marking the beginning of the war was followed by a series
of demonstrations at al-Azhar and other major universities, as well
as the lawyers' and journalists' syndicates, upon the Israeli assassination
of Hamas founder and spiritual leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin just three
days later. While none of the protests matched the magnitude of
those that rocked the Egyptian capital in March 2003, the constant
recurrence of public demonstrations over the past year reveals much
about how regional crises continue to exacerbate domestic economic
and political tensions.
A NEW KIND
OF DISSENT
On the morning
of March 20, as they had the previous year, central security forces
marched into downtown Cairo's Tahrir Square, making it once again
resemble an army barracks. The estimated 5,000 security personnel
easily contained the 2,000 demonstrators assembled, but the enormous
security presence did not deter protesters from publicly indicting
the government in a way that was unimaginable only two years ago.
In the shadow of the massive government building in the square,
Nasserists, Islamists, leftists and liberals condemned the US occupation
of Iraq and bitterly criticized the inaction and impotence of Arab
governments. A coffin carried through the crowd bore the epitaph,
"Here lies the Arab League," and demonstrators cried out:
"What is happening now in Iraq will happen tomorrow in Cairo!"
But the demonstration
turned quickly to expressions of outrage at Egypt's economic woes,
illustrating deep-seated contempt for the government. Citing price
increases that have rendered staples like beans expensive and turned
meat into an unattainable luxury for many Egyptians, the crowd aimed
its anger directly at Prime Minister Atef Ebeid. "Atef, a kilo
of beans now costs six pounds! Atef, a kilo of meat is over thirty
pounds! Atef, the people of Egypt [are forced to] eat bricks!"
Protest leaders underlined the staggering economic disparity between
rich and poor by calling out to the crowd, "They wear the latest
fashions!" To which the crowd responded, "And we live
ten to a room!"
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(Tamir
Moustafa)
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Demonstrators
also verbally attacked the crony capitalists arrayed around the
regime, who have reaped millions from controlled markets. "Ahmed
Ezz, living in luxury, tell us who is protecting you? Down with
the monopoly of the steel mills!" Many have accused Ezz of
using his prominent positions in the ruling party and the People's
Assembly to consolidate control over the Egyptian steel market.
Protest leaders and demonstrators repeated again and again, "Corruption,
corruption is filling the country -- skyrocketing corruption! Where
is justice? Justice is dead." Toward the end of the day, protesters
were even so bold as to challenge the regime with the kind of words
which, only two years ago, no one would have dared to utter in public.
"Say to Mubarak, say to Sorour, when will you get the hell
out of here?" demanded the crowd of President Husni Mubarak
and Ahmed Fathi Sorour, speaker of the People's Assembly. "Down,
down with Mubarak!" The chorus continued, "We want a free
government, we want to build a new country, we want to live a happy
life!"
FLOATING THE
POUND
Gone are the
days when Egypt could claim to be an emerging "tiger on the
Nile," in reference to the Asian tigers. The structural adjustment
program, which in the mid-1990s had successfully lowered inflation,
attracted foreign investment and generated annual growth rates above
6 percent, had stalled by the late 1990s. Structural adjustment
entailed privatization of numerous state-owned enterprises and laying
off many of their workers. Yet the remaining bulk of the public
sector, still inefficient and overstaffed, continues to hemorrhage
money. Hard currency reserves, once as high as $15 billion in the
mid-1990s, now hover at just over $1 billion. Afraid of the potential
social and political repercussions of further layoffs, the government
shelved its plans for further privatization. Foreign investors have
taken this move as yet another sign of the state's weak commitment
to comprehensive economic reform.
The Egyptian
pound, long overvalued with its peg to the US dollar, also made
Egyptian exports less competitive in international markets, further
contributing to the balance of payments crisis, or the gap between
exports and imports. The government had maintained the peg in order
to maximize hard currency revenues from tourism, despite its long-term
negative effect on the country's growth potential. But the result
was simply to delay the political turbulence that would follow the
inevitable devaluation. Ironically, when the government finally
floated the pound in January 2003, most Egyptians saw devaluation
as a sudden manifestation of economic decline, when in fact the
pound had been under increasing pressure for years. Not wishing
to face the political repercussions of what was turning out to be
a freefall in the value of the pound, the government intervened
and fixed the new exchange rate at 6.15 pounds to the dollar, up
from 4.2. With dollars virtually unavailable in banks and currency
exchanges, foreign investors were once again discouraged and a black
market reemerged, currently trading at around 7 pounds to the dollar.
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(Tamir
Moustafa) |
Devaluation
of the pound, while necessary for long-term economic growth, resulted
in rising consumer prices and hit government and public sector employees
on fixed incomes especially hard. According to a recent study by
Heba el-Leithi, professor of statistics at Cairo University, the
inflation rate on basic food items alone is now increasing at three
times its pace during the period 2000-2002. The government recently
announced that it will increase subsidies on consumer staples and
raise the salaries of government and public sector workers by 10
percent in the next fiscal year. However, attempts to cushion the
blow of higher prices will not make up for the price increases over
the past year, much less those that are likely to come in the near
future. Popular concern over the economy can be heard in every corner
of the country, not just at demonstrations in Tahrir Square. Reflecting
popular confusion over the source of the crisis, the pop sensation
Shaaban Abd al-Rahim sings about the dollar, asking it to "slow
down a little.... You're making the prices go crazy. Everything
under you is dying!"
REGIONAL TINDERBOX
But the economy
is not the only thing making Egyptians restless. The second Palestinian
intifada, now over three years old and bloodier than ever, combined
with Iraq's steady descent into chaos, has awakened Egypt's typically
apolitical masses. Satellite television has broken state information
monopolies, and the dishes dotting the Cairo skyline beam in the
latest scenes of US military patrols in Falluja and Israeli incursions
into Gaza and the West Bank. Demonstrations in support of Palestinian
and Iraqi independence have become regular occurrences. Although
the Egyptian government still hems in demonstrations with an overwhelming
security presence, the mere fact that protests are tacitly permitted
outside the gates of university campuses marks a qualitative shift
in Egyptian political life.
Still, the
government prevents the emergence of organized opposition through
arbitrary arrest of political activists and selective application
of the draconian emergency law and emergency state security courts.
The Egyptian Popular Committee for Solidarity with the Palestinian
Intifada (EPCSPI), an ad hoc group that attempted to organize relief
missions to the Occupied Territories and organize rallies in support
of Palestinian statehood, has faced legal and extralegal intimidation.
EPCSPI organizer Ashraf Ibrahim was released in early April 2004,
after spending nearly a year in solitary confinement for videotaping
the beating of protesters by security forces at an April 19, 2003
demonstration. Spontaneous demonstrations following Sheikh Ahmed
Yassin's assassination attracted some 50,000 protesters nationwide
and illustrated once again the extent to which Egyptians are moved
by events in Palestine, as well as the extent to which events in
both Palestine and Iraq put the Egyptian state and activists on
a collision course.
Signs of increased
political consciousness due to regional tensions can be heard daily
blaring from storefronts and passing microbuses. Pop singer Shaaban
Abd al-Rahim's latest hits, "Road Map" and "Striking
Iraq," blast the US for its policies toward the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict and for launching the 2003 invasion. These tunes unfortunately
appeal to the frighteningly popular conspiracy theory in Egypt that
the US government itself may have been responsible for the attacks
of September 11, 2001, in order to justify domination of the Arab
world. But Shaaban is also critical of the incompetence of Arab
leaders, a noticeable shift from an earlier song with lyrics praising
Mubarak and former Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr Moussa. The collapse
of the Arab League summit even before its scheduled opening on March
28 makes Shaaban's line, "I wish for once one of our conferences
would be a success," resonate in Egyptian ears. A similar lament
of Arab impotence, coupled with stinging criticism of US foreign
policy, can be found in a long-running play at the Cairo Opera House,
"Messing with the Mind." Without question, the regional
political situation has seriously undermined government credibility
in the eyes of Egyptians from many walks of life, not simply those
in intellectual circles.
TALK OF REFORM
Under increasing
pressure from both domestic critics and the international community
to initiate political reforms, the government has taken a number
of steps that sound impressive on the surface, but are clearly cosmetic
on further inspection. The first step was the revocation of law
105/1980, which provided for State Security Courts. The government
advertised the abolition of the State Security Courts as a great
step forward for human rights in the country when, in reality, redundancies
built into the legal system allow the government to exert the same
forms of political domination through application of the emergency
law (in continuous force since 1981). The Emergency State Security
Courts, which the latter law allows, are still open for business.
Moreover, the government replaced provisions in law 105/1980 allowing
for the detention of any citizen for up to 15 days without trial
with a new provision built into the criminal procedures law effectively
extending the power of prosecutors to detain anyone for up to six
months at a time. In practice, the amendment allowing six-month
detentions will do little to expand government control because,
for years, the regime has employed a practice known as "recurrent
detention," where some 16,000 prisoners at any given time were
held for a period of 15 days, released on the books, and then immediately
transferred back into custody for repeated 15-day cycles that sometimes
stretch for years.
Another high-profile
reform initiative has been the creation of a National Council for
Human Rights (NCHR). Justice Minister Farouk Seif al-Nasr calls
the council "a striking new example of democratic reform in
the Arab world." In advance of Mubarak's April 12 state visit
to the US, former UN Secretary-General Boutros Ghali, now chairman
of the NCHR, marketed the body on the op-ed page of the April 7
Washington Post as "Egypt's path to rights." But while
some observers are encouraged that respected activists like Hafez
Abu Saada, director of the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights,
and Bahey Eddin Hassan, director of the Cairo Institute for Human
Rights Studies, have been appointed to the council, it is unlikely
that the NCHR will produce significant results. Members are appointed
by the government and the council has absolutely no independent
powers; rather, it serves in a strictly advisory capacity.
In addition
to its institutional deficiencies, the creation of the NCHR should
be understood in the broader context of government-NGO relations
over the past several years. The government has waged a protracted
campaign against non-governmental human rights organizations with
a variety of tactics, including cutting off foreign funding, smear
campaigns in the state-owned press, and last but not least, two
new associations laws (the first of which was struck down by the
Supreme Constitutional Court in 2000). Through associations law
84/2002, the Ministry of Social Affairs has the power to reject
or dissolve any association it deems to threaten "public order
or public morality." The government proved its resolve to apply
the full force of the law when it refused to grant legal recognition
to the Egyptian Association Against Torture, the New Women's Research
Center and the Land Center for Human Rights.
The simultaneous
assault on independent human rights NGOs and the creation of the
state-dominated National Council for Human Rights fits the classic
pattern of corporatist political engineering in modern Egypt, which
the regime has employed to great effect in controlling just about
every area of political and associational life, including labor
unions, religious institutions, professional syndicates and opposition
parties. Nasser Amin, director of the Center for the Independence
of the Judiciary and the Legal Profession, contends that the NCHR
is designed to "give the façade of human rights guarantees
and nothing more." Amin argues that "if the government
truly wanted to implement reforms, it could repeal the emergency
laws, dismantle the emergency state security courts, restore the
complete independence of the judiciary, release prisoners detained
without trial and put an end to the rampant use of torture in prison."
VOLATILE MIX
A sober assessment
of the deteriorating economic situation, the ever more explosive
regional context, increasing government reliance on authoritarian
modes of rule and, most importantly, the volatile interaction of
these three variables with one another, can leave one with a fairly
pessimistic view of what might be in store for Egypt. But in the
midst of such difficulties, some activists and political observers
are emboldened by the increasing political consciousness of ordinary
Egyptians. They rightly cite broad-based political consciousness
and social mobilization as necessary (if not sufficient) ingredients
that were largely missing from reform efforts in the 1990s. The
critical question that remains is whether rising levels of popular
discontent can be organized and channeled in such a way as to become
a productive force for positive change.

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