One big thing that happened this week in the MENA region
that shows the impact of civil society on the region was the recognition as
recipient of the prestigious PEN Pinter International Writer of Courage Award
to Samar Yazbek. She wrote a memoir chronicling the 1st month of the
Syrian revolution against Bashar Al-Assad.
Yazbek, who is an alawite, a member of the same sect as
Al-Assad’s family, was disowned by her family for taking a stance against the
Regime. Her book was dedicated to the martyrs of the uprising and those still
fighting against the ruling regime. Not only does the presence of a recognized
alawite give legitimacy to the uprising as it shows that even members of his
own sect can see Al-Assad’s wrongdoings but it also inspires those taking part
in the Revolution. She was disowned, therefore she sacrificed part of herself
already for the uprising. She fought amongst them as an alawite, showing that
the uprising unites Syria against the regime and she was recognized on the
World Stage where she dedicated to those that sacrificed for the Revolution and
those that still do. Inspiring them to fight harder and see the end of the
authoritarian regime in place.
The whole Syrian conflict and, of course to a greater
extent, the Arab Spring shows profoundly the importance of civil society in the
MENA region. After all, it is these civil societies that decided that they had
had enough of the status quo of authoritarian regimes and pretty much organized
the uprising themselves giving credence to the idea that a government only
governs at the sufferance of the people. Of course the help of a few foreign
government here and there did not hurt either but for the most part the
uprisings were a result of the people’s actions thus illustrating the
importance of civil society.
Perhaps, the situation is a warning to all governments,
authoritarianism can be carried out however after a certain point the people
will decide that enough is enough and the authoritarian leader and/or regime
will be forced to concede their hard gained power. Maybe authoritarian regimes
and regimes with strong oppression in other parts of the world (North Korea,
Iran, Russia, Thailand, Singapore) survive for a couple of reasons: lack of
viable alternatives, ingrained cultural indoctrination in the case of North
Korea, and in the case of Singapore where I lived for 3 years good governance,
showing that one does not need to be a full democracy in order to run an
efficient well governed country and perhaps, making us consider whether
democracy is such an ideal situation especially when a country is unstable and
needs a strong powerful government like the current state of the MENA region.
What they are currently doing in Singapore now is relinquishing, albeit slowly,
their hold on power so as to make it more of a democracy now that a strong
authoritarian regime is not needed as Singapore is currently a stable, modern,
economic power. Maybe that is the model that countries in the MENA region,
emerging from the Arab Spring, should take into account.
That's really cool that you lived there. Having seen the change first hand, is there anything you would recommend the MENA region apply first to have a successful transition? Morocco has begun by restructuring the policies of their constitution, would that be an effective way for the others as well?
ReplyDelete