| Experts Urge U.S. to Talk with Islamist Movements to Encourage Democratic Trends | |
| Washington, DC 27 May 2008 |
Elshinnawi report voiced by Rob Sivak - Listen (MP3)
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| The 9th Annual Conference of CSID focused on how to deal with Islamic Movements |
A recent study by the Center concluded that many secular Arab governments have used the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran to raise fears of a radical and potentially violent political Islam. And they have used that fear to justify their own autocratic governance on national security grounds. But the study found that the more these regimes have cracked down on political Islamist groups, the more popular these movements have become. The Center estimates that Islamist groups now represent about 30 percent of the electorate in Arab countries.
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| Radwan Masmoudi, President, Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy |
Masmoudi said they are asking a fundamental question: "What is the end result of democracy if we have elections, and the end result is going to be that the Islamists or the Islamic movements are going to win the elections and come to power? Is this good for democracy or bad?"
Masmoudi added: "This is, of course, the reasoning or logic that has been used by many governments in the region to postpone elections, to postpone serious democratic reforms in their countries, using the fear of Islamists or the Islamic movements coming to power."
Masmoudi said the U.S. should not allow autocratic Arab leaders to portray themselves as the only alternative to radical Islamists coming to power. He said he worries that the U.S. push for democratization in the Arab world has tapered off. But Francis Ricciardone, the former U.S. Ambassador to Egypt, insisted that American support for democratic reform in the Middle East has not weakened.
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| Ambassador Ricciardone denies that the U.S. push for democracy is backsliding |
Ambassador Ricciardone admitted, however, that the U.S. is having difficulty dealing with a trans-national Islamic movement like the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, even though some 88 members of the group were elected to the Egyptian parliament as so-called "independents" in the autumn of 2005.
"We could hardly say that we would not see these members of the parliament if they wished to see us," the former Ambassador explained. "Our political officers see members of parliaments all over the world, in Egypt and elsewhere. It does not mean we have voted for them; we did not campaign for them; we did not promote them; and we very often disagree very strongly with their points of view."
Ambassador Ricciardone said an atmosphere of mutual distrust complicates relations between the U.S. and the Muslim Brotherhood. And he noted that U.S. contacts with the group have been strictly limited to avoid antagonizing the Egyptian government, which has outlawed this Islamist organization.
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| Professor Emad Shahin sees no contradiction between U.S. interests and democratic Islamists |
Shanin added that this dialogue would promote the mutual interest of both sides because, as he put it, "I do not see them as necessarily opposed or in severe contradiction to each other."
One man who has worked hard to promote democracy in the Muslim world is Saad El-din Ibrahim, an Egyptian-American sociologist and human rights activist who was arrested by the Egyptian government in 2000 and spent 18 months in jail before being cleared of all charges.
At the Washington conference, he pointed out that two-thirds of the 1.3 billion Muslims in the world are living under democratically-elected governments, for example, in Indonesia, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Turkey, Malaysia and India.
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| Professor Saad Eldin Ibrahim calls on the U.S. to engage Islamists |
"One of the things that really affected the dialogue with Islamists in prison," Ibrahim said, "was the elections in Turkey in the fall of 2002, which was followed also by elections in Morocco. And that advanced the dialogue."
Ibrahim said he encouraged Islamists who said the believed in "universal values" to "Come out for democracy without any reservations!"
The Turkish and Moroccan elections, he said "helped me to push the argument. And in fact, they agreed to adopt democracy -- western style pluralistic democracy."
Like other scholars gathered at the Washington Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy, Professor Ibrahim warned against any slackening of U.S. support for democratic reform in the Middle East, out of fear of radical Islamist gains. Such a stance only bolsters the power of autocratic Arab rulers, he said, and helps fuel Islamic radicalism.
Ibrahim added that the U.S. must work to dialogue with the many moderate Islamic groups in the region that, he said, believe in pluralistic democracy, peaceful transitions of power, the equality of men and women and the equality of Muslims and non-Muslims.
from voanews.com









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