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CARNEGIE
ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE: DRY RUN FOR LEGITIMACY - THE EGYPTIAN
MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD'S POLITICAL PARTY PLATFORM:
25/01/08
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / - 25
January 2007 -- The
production of a political platform by Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood is a sign
that real developments—some encouraging, some worrying—are occurring in
Egyptian politics. While the Muslim Brotherhood is prevented by Egypt's
government from forming a political party—a ban unlikely to be overturned in
the near future—the release of a platform signaled what sort of party they
would found if allowed to do so, according to a new report from the Carnegie
Endowment.
In The
Draft Party Platform of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood: Foray Into Political
Integration or Retreat Into Old Positions?, Senior Associates
Nathan Brown and Amr Hamzawy analyze the draft platform's mixed
signals—surprising progressive reforms; regressive, controversial stances; and
the chances of achieving a consensus on the anticipated final document.
Encouragingly,
the platform advances notions of freedom of religion and expression, pluralistic
politics, property rights, women's enfranchisement, and state sovereignty. Yet
it also called for the establishment of a council of elected senior religious
scholars, effectively placing the government under the scrutiny of an
extra-constitutional entity—a regression from more moderate positions upheld
by the movement's leadership in recent years.
Key
Conclusions:
-
The
platform was designed to regain momentum following a marked increase in
government restrictions on the Brotherhood after their success in the 2005
parliamentary elections. However, caught between the expectations of loyal
activists, who strongly support the implementation of shari'a law, and
alienating the more moderate public, disputes among Brotherhood leaders
over the platform showed confusion and a lack of consensus over strategy
at this critical juncture.
-
The
platform fails to address how the future political party would relate to the
broader social movement. The Brotherhood ignores both the experiences of
Islamist parties in Morocco, Jordan, and Yemen, who advocate a functional
separation between the party and the movement, and a major constitutional
hurdle by failing to address opening membership to all Egyptians.
-
Public
debate about the platform has focused exclusively on the major contentious
issues to the exclusion of detailed economic and social positions. For
example, the economic strategy advocates a strong interventionist state, yet
the platform also calls for a limited social role for the state, with a
larger role for civil society and NGOs.
“Brotherhood
leaders were aware from the beginning of the limits of what a platform could
accomplish. At most it could show Egyptians what a Brotherhood party would look
like, but the regime, the law, and now the constitution seem to be far more
serious obstacles than public opinion to a Muslim Brotherhood party. The
platform shows that the movement is still very much struggling with how to
handle the demands of its ambition to be a normal political actor. But no amount
of internal debate is likely to reassure a regime that seems unable to accept
any serious political actor as a legitimate partner in Egyptian political
life,” the authors concluded.
Labels:
United
Nations, U.N., Muslim
Brotherhood, political
party platform
~~~~~
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O'Connor, Genevieve Stamper, Max Stamper and
others.
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