Méditerranée & Proche Orient

Jeudi 24 juin 2010 4 24 /06 /Juin /2010 22:46

Le Premier ministre israélien, Benjamin Netanyahu, s'est lancé mercredi dans une violente diatribe contre tous ceux qui critiquent Israël, dénonçant " une alliance contre nature " entre les associations de défense des droits de l'homme, l'extrême gauche et l'Iran.

" Des jours difficiles nous attendent ", a déclaré le chef de file de la droite israélienne, en réponse à une motion de censure déposée par les centristes, qui estiment que les récents choix politiques du Premier ministre ont conduit Israël vers une forme d'isolement diplomatique.

Critiqué après l'assaut meurtrier donné le 31 mai contre un convoi humanitaire en partance pour la bande de Gaza, Netanyahu a appelé à la formation d'une union nationale contre ce qu'il a décrit comme " une violente attaque de délégitimation " de l'existence de l'Etat d'Israël.

Le chef du gouvernement a par ailleurs déclaré que les militants propalestiniens qui avaient organisé cette opération faisaient partie d'une " campagne orchestrée par les ennemis d'Israël, dans une alliance contre nature entre l'islam radical et l'extrême gauche ", faisant référence aux groupes soutenus par l'Iran.

"Scandale national"

" Les attaques dirigées contre nous n'ont qu'un seul but, nous priver du droit naturel dont dispose chaque Etat lorsqu'il s'agit de se défendre ", a poursuivi Netanyahu, qui a également pointé du doigt le rapport Goldstone, qui soupçonne Israël d'avoir commis des crimes de guerre dans la bande de Gaza en décembre 2008 et janvier 2009.

Toujours dans le même esprit, le Premier ministre a prétendu que près de 85% des résolutions votées par le Conseil des droits de l'homme de l'Onu, qui a commandité le rapport Goldstone, "visaient" seulement Israël. " Il ne se passe rien d'autre dans le monde ? ", s'est-il interrogé avec une pointe d'ironie.

Pour finir, Netanyahu a vilipendé l'extrême gauche israélienne, évoquant " un scandale national " à propos des militants israéliens qui boycottent les produits "made in Israël" pour protester contre l'attitude de l'Etat juif dans les territoires palestiniens.

 

Source : Reuters

 

 

 

 

 

Par ERASME - Publié dans : Méditerranée & Proche Orient
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Jeudi 17 juin 2010 4 17 /06 /Juin /2010 12:48

Le gouvernement israélien a décidé d'alléger le blocus de la bande de Gaza, un peu plus de deux semaines après l'assaut sanglant d'une flottille d'aide à destination de l'enclave palestinienne contrôlée par le Hamas.

" Il a été convenu d'assouplir le dispositif qui permet aux biens civils de pénétrer dans la bande de Gaza et d'accroître le flux de matériaux nécessaires aux projets civils sous supervision internationale ", dit-il dans un communiqué, sans détailler la liste des produits concernés.

Le gouvernement de Benjamin Netanyahu semble donc prêt à autoriser les agences de l'Onu à importer des matériaux de construction, qui font cruellement défaut depuis l'offensive israélienne menée en décembre 2008 et janvier 2009 dans la bande de Gaza.

" Les procédures de sécurité " mise en oeuvre pour empêcher les armes et le matériel militaire d'y pénétrer resteront en vigueur, souligne le "cabinet de sécurité", qui a entamé ses discussions mercredi. Le communiqué n'évoque en revanche aucun assouplissement du blocus maritime.

Imposé après la victoire du Hamas aux législatives palestiniennes de 2006, ce blocus a été renforcé lorsque le mouvement islamiste s'est emparé du territoire, en juin 2007. Les appels en faveur de la levée de cette mesure se multiplient depuis l'assaut de la "flottille de la liberté", qui a fait neuf morts parmi les militant pro-palestiniens.

Attention aux effets d'annonce ! Faut-il encore qu'ils soient suivis d'effets concrets !

 

Source : Reuters

 

Par De la Boisserie - Publié dans : Méditerranée & Proche Orient
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Mardi 15 juin 2010 2 15 /06 /Juin /2010 06:05

Le gouvernement israélien a décidé de mettre sur pied une commission d'enquête sur l'abordage sanglant par des fusiliers-marins de Tsahal le 31 mai en haute mer d'une flottille d'aide parrainée par des ONG turques qui cherchait à briser le blocus de Gaza.

Cette opération, qui s'est soldée par la mort de neuf militants turcs pro-palestiniens, a suscité une tollé international et poussé le Conseil de sécurité des Nations unies à réclamer une enquête "rapide, crédible, impartiale et transparente" - mais pas nécessairement "indépendante" en raison du soutien des Etats-Unis à Israël.

Celui-ci a toutefois cédé aux pressions internationales en admettant au sein de la commission, qui sera présidée par l'ancien juge à la Cour suprême Jacob Turkel, deux observateurs étrangers sans droit de vote, l'ancien lauréat nord-irlandais du prix Nobel de la paix David Trimble et le magistrat canadien Ken Watkin.

 

Source : Reuters

 

 

La Turquie, qui a déclaré que ses relations avec Israël ne seraient " jamais plus les mêmes ", avait dénoncé par avance toute enquête uniquement menée par l'Etat juif.

Le président palestinien Mahmoud Abbas a estimé lundi à Paris que la commission décidée par celui-ci " ne correspond pas à ce que le Conseil de sécurité a demandé ".

Par la voix de son porte-parole, le secrétaire général de l'Onu Ban Ki-moon a dit "prendre note" de l'initiative israélienne.

" Une enquête approfondie de la part d'Israël est importante et pourrait s'intégrer aux propositions du secrétaire général ", a déclaré Farhan Hag.

Ce dernier a toutefois ajouté que "la proposition (de Ban) d'une enquête internationale restait sur la table et il espère à ce sujet une réponse positive d'Israël".

"Légalité", "Transparence"

" Je crois que la décision du cabinet ce matin de mettre sur pied cette commission publique indépendante montrera au monde entier qu'Israël a agi dans la légalité, la transparence et avec totale responsabilité ", a déclaré à la presse le Premier ministre israélien, Benjamin Netanyahu.

Israël affirme que ses fusiliers-marins ont tiré " en état de légitime défense " sur les militants turcs présents à bord du Mavi Marmara, le bateau amiral de la flottille, qui les auraient accueillis à coups de bâton et de couteau.

Saluée par les Etats-Unis, la commission d'enquête créée à l'unanimité par le gouvernement israélien n'aura pas à connaître des conditions dans lesquelles la décision politique a été prise d'aborder la flottille et devra seulement se prononcer sur la compatibilité de cette action avec le droit international.

Benjamin Netanyahu a précisé que les soldats et les officiers qui ont planifié ou participé à l'abordage n'auraient pas à déposer devant la commission, qui ne pourra avoir accès qu'au conseil militaire qui a examiné après coup le déroulement de l'opération.

On ignore de combien de temps Jacob Turkel, flanqué d'un juriste international et d'un ancien général israélien, disposera pour remettre ses conclusions, qui ont d'ores et déjà été rejetées comme partiales par le ministre turc des Affaires étrangères, Ahmet Davutoglu.

Par ERASME - Publié dans : Méditerranée & Proche Orient
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Dimanche 13 juin 2010 7 13 /06 /Juin /2010 10:18

.../... (On Change in the Mediterranean, by Dimitar Bechev and Isabel Schäfer (1))

 

Who are the agents of change?

Looking at the region at hand, one notes the great variety and diversity of agents. Country-based, subnational, local, segmental, social class, political cultural and other differences and specificities all account for heterogeneity. Such agents might push for democracy by promoting civic rights and challenging regimes, e.g. over political expression or the lack of just access to resources.

Agents of change can be elite actors, intellectuals, artists, media, mudawen (bloggers) ; individual activists but also broader societal groups such as (lower) middle class businessmen, civil campaigners as the members of  Kefaya, migrants, youth; political parties, foundations, thinktanks but also trade unions or broader social movements.

What matters is the demand for good governance and political representation, in that such agents transmission and voice the dissatisfaction of broader groups in society into the political arena. In that respect, agents of change are not necessarily coterminous with the NGO scene in the countries in question. They can also be governmental actors embracing reform. In any case, distinctions should always be taken cum grano salis. Even ‘classical’ actors such trade unions, are sometimes state controlled in some Arab countries. That is why NGOs and, significantly, non-violent (mainstream) Islamist movements increasingly take the role of a mouthpiece for citizens’ concerns and engage in social welfare issues.

Islamists deliberate extensively whether they should participate within established political systems or rather stay without (see Nahed Ezzeldeen’s paper below). Even if Islamist actors are unlikely to embrace liberal values, they are, too, definable as agents of change, in the sense that in most Middle Eastern and North African countries they represent one of the rare ideological alternatives to the regime (Burgat, 1995, 2007). The prominence of Islamists has to do with the weakness of liberal opposition movements suffering from internal divisions and narrow societal appeal. Islamists fill an ideological gap, at least on the discursive level. On the one hand, in most of the Arab countries, Islamists represent the needs of the vulnerable parts of society and they contribute to social change. On the other hand, most of these movements take a (ultra-)conservative stance on social and cultural issues such as women’s rights and homosexuality. Thus Islamists are simultaneously agents of change and status quo player, depending on the domain in question. On the other side of the political spectrum, liberal or progressive agents of change fight for equal rights and freedom of ways of life. Some opposition movements have opened a little more political space, be it in Lebanon, Algeria or Egypt. Most of these groups, whether of Islamist or secular background, share one common, overarching cause : the struggle for rule of law.

Turning to leadership, will the next generation of potential leaders in North Africa and the Middle East be agents of change? In Egypt, Hosni Moubarak’s son, Gamal (46), is being groomed for succession in the presidency; in Tunisia, it is Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s son-in-law Sakher el-Materi (30), and in Libya, Muammar Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam (38). Will hereditary autocrats opt for political and economic reforms or will they defend family and clan interests ?

Leadership renewal in Morocco, Jordan and Syria in 1999 was quickly followed by disillusion owing to the limited scope and sluggish speed of ensuing change. Today, legitimate political leaders commanding society’s sympathy is rather exceptional across the region.

International and transnational actors – governments, international institutions, transnational civil society, migrant networks, diasporas etc. - comprise yet another cluster of agents. External incentive such as the privileged/advanced status or even the prospect of membership in the EU may drive political and economic transformation, although the causal

relationship is, alas, not always working. North-South co-operation by civil societies might help, too. However, the hitherto experience of the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean is very different from that of Eastern Europe or Latin America when it comes to outside linkages and anchors.

Regional organizations (such as the African Union, Arab Maghreb Union, Arab League, Organization of Islamic Conference) play a marginal role. Outstanding border issues hinder regional integration and economic exchanges between local countries remain difficult, although the informal market is growing. Democratic change largely depends on the economic situation in a given country, or at least, a positive economic situation underwritten by international institutional webs can help political liberalization and the empowerment of agents of change.

Migrants play a crucial role here because, as Mehdi Lahlou argues, they channel values, ideas and new impetus to the host countries and make a positive contribution to transformation. The number of bi-nationals, individuals with a migrant background from Arab countries, Turkey and Israel living in western Europe, characterized by ‘hybrid identities’ (Foroutan and Schäfer, 2009), is actually estimated at 20 million and growing. This means that further research should be done to investigate the role of those groups as catalysts and immediate drivers of transformation.

 

Do agents of change make a difference ?

Democratization and economic development are largely stalled across the Arab world. The factors are well-known and need not be repeated here – from the outstanding conflicts to the persistence of authoritarian structures and the entrenchment of rentier economies. Facing such structural constraints, actors have limited options but to be co-opted. The capacity for mobilization and civic action is limited. Conformism and lack of prospects is a problem for minorities and different-minded people, but most of all for the younger generations, who grew up with the discrepancies between the external world presented and accessible via satellite TV and the new media on the one hand, and the stagnating local moral norms and standards on the other.

However, it is important not to understate the transformative potential of such agents. Despite the somber views expressed by the world’s commentariat or substantiated by the plethora of governance indices, this collective work suggests that change does take place. As we observe in Egypt and now, even more significantly, in Iran, public criticism of leaders, be it by individuals, ad hoc groups or organized movements, exemplifies demand for democracy and rights across the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean (Schäfer and Henry, 2009). The emergence of new constituencies for change results from the exposure to globalization with the expanding flow of goods, services, information and ideas across state borders. In countries like Egypt, two decades of economic reform have produced new middle classes and employees in the private sector, who are not directly dependent for their welfare on the otherwise omnipresent state. If one believes in

historical parallels then the cases of Spain in the 1960s and Turkey in the 1980s where economic transformations set the scene for political change spring to mind, although the experience of A long-term research project on Hybrid Euro-Muslim Identity Models and the role of ‘hybrid’ migrants as agents of change is currently being conducted at the Humboldt University Berlin, cf. www.heymat.hu-berlin.de.

 

Tunisia since it embarked on economic restructuring in 1987 serve as a salutary reminder that the linkage might not work. While reinforcing social differentiation greater economic openness has fallen short of creating alternative power centres or challenger elites (Kienle, 2005; Boubekeur in this dossier).

Technological change associated with globalization has had a more direct effect on the political process. Websites and blogs have rendered the public sphere more diverse and politically engaged breathing life into civil society, in contrast to ‘old’ media such as TV and the press (cf. Mohsen-Finan, 2009). As recent showcase trials in Morocco (followed by royal pardon) suggest the authorities are in position to reassert their control. They could also temporarily ban access to Internet sites such as YouTube as it has also happened in democratically more advanced Turkey. When compared with their past, not with other regions ‘in transition’, societies across the Southern Mediterranean, even in dictatorships such as Syria and Libya, appear more dynamic and receptive to change.

 

Outline

The papers featured below build on the discussions at a series of academic conferences : Agents of Change in the Mediterranean (Free University of Berlin, 1-4 May 2008/Oxford, 18-19 June 2009) and Mediterranean Unions: Visions and Politics (St Antony’s College, Oxford, 6-7 June 2008). They have formed part of a research project co-piloted by Dimitar Bechev and Isabel Schäfer under the RAMSES2 Network of Excellence of Mediterranean Studies supported by the EC Sixth Framework Programme. As other research initiatives of the EU, the spirit of RAMSES2 has been to promote scholarly exchange across the shores of the Mediterranean, between researchers and universities in the EU and in what bureaucratic language refers to as ‘third countries’. The intention of the academic events and the resulting themed section is to decentre the notion of change in a dual sense: away from the world of ‘high politics’ as well as away from the vantage point of Brussels institutions. This, of course, has been more of a general methodological preference than a rule fixed in stone so both Europe and government agencies appear in the case studies alongside with assorted ‘bottom-up’ agents of change. All three papers investigate how micro-level factors, whether the migrants’ pursuit of welfare and status within local communities in countries of origin and abroad (Lahlou) or indeed business operators’ profitmaking instincts (Boubekeur) drive social agents in their efforts to re-negotiate their autonomy vis-à-vis state institutions. These vivid and rich case studies add empirical flesh to the metaquestions mapped out in the foregoing introduction.

In his contribution, Mehdi Lahlou (INSEA, Rabat) investigates the impact of migration on society and politics in the Maghreb, with a special focus on the Moroccan case. He hypothesizes that transnational migration might have transformative effects in three domains: (1) social change, concerning the empowerment of women, the evolution of work ethics, gains in educational levels, social solidarity; (2) economic change covering the effects of remittances and the transfer of skills; and, perhaps most significantly, (3) political change related to the advancement of democracy and the rule of law. He finds that migrants’ role has been largely limited to the economy but also procures evidence that the involvement of transnational networks in local development projects has actually strengthened the quality of democratic participation at the grass-roots level, particularly in peripheral areas traditionally neglected by the state. At the same time, Lahlou argues, in agreement with much of the literature, that migration from Sub-Saharan Africa transiting the Maghreb en route to Western Europe has led to the tightening of local regimes and reinforcement of heavy-handed authoritarian practices curtailing human rights.

Nahed Ezzeldeen (Cairo University) discusses the politics of protest in Egypt, with a reference to the Kefaya (‘enough!’) movement emerging in 2004. Her paper tackles two main questions : (1) what were the social and historical origins of such a protest movement ? ; (2) what were the effects of Kefaya’s appearance on Egypt’s political scene ? She sees Kefaya in light of multiple past precedents of citizen action, both before and after the 1952 revolution. Ezzeldeen contends that despite the movement’s demise after 2005 it has managed to create a more cohesive opposition to the regime from hitherto disparate social groups and actors while also nurturing a culture of protest. Far from being a success and falling seriously short of overblown initial expectations inside Egypt and abroad, Kefaya’s primary accomplishment has been the broadening of political space for protest and human rights advocacy by citizens as well as the questioning of the regime’s legitimacy. It has also created alliances, albeit temporarily, bridging cleavages related to social class, political values (Muslim Brotherhood vs. the secular opposition), regional divides (Cairo-vs.-provincial governorates), and confession (Muslims vs. Copts). Ezzeldeen furthermore believes that the movement has had a significant demonstration effect on other Arab countries.

Looking at the role business elites in Algerian politics, Amel Boubekeur (Carnegie Middle East Centre) takes a frontal attack against the commonplace notion in the literature that economic liberalization leads, in a deterministic fashion, to democratic and good-governance reform. She studies the transformation of the managerial class of post-independence Algeria’s socialist economy into a full-fledged business elite, starting in the 1980s. In her view, these elite became enmeshed in the clientelist structures centred on the ubiquitous trio of power, the FLN, army and civil services, benefiting from the boon of the hydrocarbon economy. To her, the rising prominence of business figures in the public sphere is reflective, first and foremost, of the authorities’ strategy of diversifying sources of support through co-optation, in the wake of the destructive civil war in the 1990s. However, the paper concludes that, at the end of the day, new economic elites’ political loyalties are at best shifty. Their present support for the status quo does not preclude a re-orientation towards a political regime seen as more acceptable by the public at large, which in turn would legitimize Algerian private business’ increased participation in the circles of power.

 

agentsofchange agentsofchange

 

 

 

 

Par ERASME - Publié dans : Méditerranée & Proche Orient
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Dimanche 13 juin 2010 7 13 /06 /Juin /2010 10:07

Collective imagination associates the Mediterranean with continuity rather than change. While Fernand Braudel’s concept of longue durée dominates the study of Mediterranean past, observers of current affairs lament the persistence of authoritarianism, violent conflict and economic stagnation across the Middle East and North Africa. That was not the case a mere decade ago when the Barcelona Process was launched by the EU together with the governments of the socalled Southern and Eastern Mediterranean, including the present-day member states of Malta and Cyprus. Barcelona’s vision was very much in tune with the prevailing liberal mood in the West and elsewhere in the wake of the Cold War. Inspired by Kantian internationalism, the scenario entailed the peaceful spread of democracy, economic interdependence, and the growth of co-operative institutions governing relations between states. This vision never came to fruition.

Indeed local responses to a stream of external initiatives such as the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership (EMP), the European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) and, most recently, the Union for the Mediterranean (UFM) have struck a dissonant note with abstract notions of transformation and ‘normative power’ recycled by the students of international politics, European integration and transitions to democracy.

While bicoastal links in trade and foreign direct investment (FDI) have expanded from the mid-1990s thanks to the liberalization packages pushed forward by the EU, the Middle East and North Africa have been largely immune to the waves of democratization sweeping adjacent regions, from Turkey to parts of Sub-Saharan Africa. In the 2000s, the derailment of the Oslo Peace Process, 9/11, the US invasion of Iraq, the wars in Lebanon and Gaza have all added to a particularly inhospitable regional environment, torpedoing the multilateral frameworks tasked with improving relations between states and peoples through functional integration. President Nicolas Sarkozy’s Union for the Mediterranean, with its Secretariat rendered dysfunctional, is the latest casualty of the region’s volatile politics. Meanwhile, the muscular US agenda for the unilateral promotion of democracy, beloved to the Bush administration and its neocon gurus, has hit a wall with its inability to nudge local allies such as Egypt to undertake more than cosmetic changes of their political system. The electoral victory of Hamas in 2005, for its part, fuelled fears that, contrary to liberal postulates, democratization breeds conflict and instability, not peaceful transformation and compromise on divisive issues related to territorial borders or fundamental political values. It made even more acute the impossible choice between stagnation and socio-political change threatening, at least in Western perceptions, to open the Pandora box of radical Islam.

Though not misleading, the above certainly is a very broad-brushed portrayal which glosses over the diversity of cases in the ‘Southern and Eastern Mediterranean’ as well as the complexity of the transformations in politics, economic and social affairs of particular countries and regional clusters. Written by authors from the ‘South’, the papers included in this collective working paper challenge both the fallacy of inevitable change and the fallacy of eternal stagnation. Rather than positing a stark choice between authoritarianism and instability, they emphasize the empowerment of various social actors, such as civic groups, migrants and businesses, altering the mode of the state’s interaction with society in Morocco, Egypt and Algeria. These empirical studies illuminate their potential but also inherent limitations to act as agents of change capable of setting entirely new ‘rules of the game’. Through them, the present set of papers seeks to go beyond both wishful thinking and essentialist notions of the ‘Muslim societies’ or Arab countries as eternal captives of their modern history or cultural features.

What one is left, at the end of the day, is incrementalism with multiple faces and trajectories. It is observable, for instance, in the strategies adopted by outside actors such as the EU. The southern branch of the ENP privileges economic opening and gains in ‘good governance’ to conditionality predicated on democratic reform, irrespective of the latter’s inclusion in the bilateral action plans concluded and ‘jointly owned’ by the European Commission and partner governments. The contrast with the EU’s conditionality-based policies in post-communist Europe but also, significantly, vis-a-vis Turkey is clear. With the Obama administration in power, the use approach has converged with that of the EU. While previously pursuing a course focused on military aid and direct political pressure, America looks more favourably at Euro-style caution seeking to minimize the risks of ‘backsliding’ to harsher forms of authoritarianism or civil war as the Algerian conflict in the 1990s.

What counts as change ?

Incrementalism from without mirrors incrementalism from within manifest, across North Africa and the Middle East, in the partial relaxation of government control over society, carving up spaces of free expression (particularly thanks to the new Internet-based media), greater pluralism in the officially sanctioned public sphere at the national and local level. This begs the question of what is meant by change and to what degree our normative yardsticks are adequate when confronted with hard facts.

Change has multiple aspects: political, economic, socio-cultural. Politically, it refers to the conversion of governance systems, progressive affirmation of rights and freedoms, renewal of leadership, rule of law. While enhancing liberty and distributing more evenly resources, such shifts might have human costs too, as we are reminded by Mehdi Lahlou’s paper in this dossier.

Furthermore, it cannot be reduced to stylized processes such as the evolution to a modern consumerist ethic, rapid ‘regime change’, or externally induced democratization conforming to Western ideas. Non-Western societies such as India or Japan stand as a proof that democratic rule comes in various, often dissimilar, shapes and modes. For the Arab world, long-term horizons remain open. Europe’s model of ‘open society’ based on the freedom of expression, political representation through parties, trade unions and civic movements marshals no majority amidst south Mediterranean societies, let alone the authoritarian leadership. International surveys such as the UNDP Arab Human Development Reports (AHDR), Freedom House or the Bertelsmann Transformation Index (BTI), show more continuity rather than change in terms of political rights and liberties across North Africa and the Middle East. This grey area between democracy and autocracy has been attributed different labels in the literature, varying from ‘authoritarian rule’ (O’Donnell, Schmitter and Whitehead, 1986), ‘limited pluralism’ or ‘multipartism under control’ (see contribution of Ezzeldeen below), ‘competitive authoritarianism’ (Levitsky, Way 2002), ‘semi-authoritarianism’ (Ottaway, 2003), ‘electoral authoritarianism’ (Diamond 2002, Schedler 2002), ‘hybrid regimes’ (Karl, 1995) to ‘defective democracies’ (Merkel, Puhle and Croissant, 2006). In such conditions, change may also mean ‘backsliding’, meaning young or emerging  democracies’ regressing to authoritarian rule. Last but not least, we might conceive of it as reforms in the direction of an Islamic democracy, a model, which remains vague and open to contestation.

Interconnectedness between economic liberalization and political reform is equally a sore spot in the academic and policy debate. The recent financial and economic crisis has given credence to arguments favouring the strong state and state capitalism and therefore the weakening of the liberal democracy model. This delights authoritarian leaders, in Arab countries and elsewhere, supporting their strategies of hindering or managing political openings. High unemployment, coupled with domestic and interstate conflicts and weak channels of representation are additional factors stymieing transformation.

For all its variability in terms of intensity and trajectory, gradual change seems to lead into two particular directions. The first path could be termed, following Steven Heydemann (2007), upgraded authoritarianism. It is associated with selective reforms implemented in a topdown fashion whose principal goal is to ensure continuity. As we know from the experience of  pacted transitions across the ‘northern Mediterranean’ in the 1970s, survival is invariably the primary motivation for incumbent elites such as the families belonging to the Makhzen in Morocco. However, in North Africa and the Middle East, the capacity of the ancien régime to control and shape the rules of engagement are incomparably higher as is its ability to co-opt emergent elites, e.g. the new business classes born out in Algeria’s experiments with marketization (see Amel Boubekeur’s paper below) or as a result the infitah policy in Egypt since the 1970s, into the networks of power (cf. Brynen et al, 1995). Rather than outright repression, upgraded authoritarianism has relied on softer instruments such as access to wages and employment, disbursal of state subsidies, extension of patronage, alliances with the private sector cemented by rents generated by the opening to EU and global markets. As observed by Eberhard Kienle (2001), the linkage between liberalization and democratic transition could be a ‘grand delusion’.

To fend off external and internal pressures, governments would often adopt progressive legislation, which would remain on paper owing to lack of political will and/or scarce institutional capacity for implementation. Recent laws such as Morocco’s Press Code or Associations’ Act serve as good illustrations. Analysts have registered that measures undertaken under the ENP Action Plans, such as introducing a 20 per cent quota for women in Jordan’s local authorities, are rarely followed up by further reforms (Comelli and Paciello, 2009). Regimes maintain their hold over civic activism through co-opting so-called GONGOs, that is NGOs with strong connections to the authorities. They are also increasingly apt to steer, rather than directly rig, competitive elections through gerrymandering, electoral laws and other means to skew the playing field. Once elected parliaments have been sidelined in the decision-making process and powerlessness has discouraged participation in elections (Kausch, 2009).

To be fair, upgraded authoritarianism could be read as a product of negotiation between incumbent elites and challengers. In fact, it brings parts of the ‘Southern Mediterranean’ closer to cases of hybrid regimes exhibiting a combination of democratic and authoritarian traits in other corners of the world, from Russia to Latin America. In time, the PR efforts to meet the EU and US demands for reforms might also entrap a number of governments and push them further on the path of gradual liberalization limiting the scope for the otherwise habitual moves towards ‘deliberalization’.

Upgraded authoritarianism therefore contrasts with the second path, that of authoritarian re-entrenchment where cautious opening is followed by recourse to coercion and repression. The case of Egypt is particularly instructive in this respect. The presidential and parliamentary elections in 2005 were preceded by a democratic opening on an unprecedented scale, which had to do with the mobilization of the largely secular opposition groups such as the Kefaya movement and the al-Ghad party, and pressure from the Bush administration. The brief democratic moment manifest in the multicandidate race for the presidency and the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood’s winning 20 per cent of seats in parliament was short-lived. In 2007, the regime personified by Mubarak and the National Democratic Party (NDP) amended the Constitution to curb the rise of the Muslim Brothers and the secular opposition as well as to rein in the increasingly activist judiciary (Shehata, 2009). This turn to authoritarianism is reminiscent of past episodes of ‘rollback’, e.g. in the early 1990s. Still, Nahed Ezzeldeen’s contribution to this collective edition argues that Kefaya and the ‘people power’ interlude of 2005 poses a long-term challenge to Mubarak’s grip on power.

Such policies have been rationalized by the rising prominence of security in domestic politics as well as in dealings with the EU and US. In Algeria, President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s second term in office (2004-2009) was marked by a hardening of the regime in response to the reemergence of radical Islamist militancy spearheaded by the self-styled Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) after 2006. It came after a period when the regime was increasingly ‘civilianizing’ and using the Civil Concord to co-opt former Islamic militants and their families through money filling the state coffers thanks to the spike in gas and oil prices (Darbouche, 2009). Americans and western Europeans’ fears of transnational terrorism and political Islam more generally has given repression a veneer of legitimacy, with the ENP instruments not being used to pressure authoritarian-minded governments to liberalize. Countries such as Syria and Libya have, at various times, resisted both ENP and the Association Agreements under the Barcelona Process as either detrimental to national economies or a neo-colonialist plot ; Algeria resisted the ENP Action Plan. Despite that, these countries have been able to forge close links with individual member states on account of their importance as diplomatic allies, energy suppliers or gatekeepers controlling illegal migration into Europe.

The presence of those two paths suggests that incremental change may or may not be geared towards positive outcomes. They also challenge the assumption that socio-economic openness or even advancement in governance leads directly, as a deus ex machina, to rapid democratization or even another wave of ‘coloured revolutions’. Once these assumptions, central to the political discourse of the 1990s, are set aside it becomes relatively straightforward to study empirically the evolving dynamics of civil society, migrant networks, businesses, including the interplay with the political system. Especially given the fact that civil societies in the Southern Mediterranean sometimes are more developed, in tune with modern trends and interconnected between each other than governmental agencies and political bodies.

.../... (On Change in the Mediterranean, by Dimitar Bechev and Isabel Schäfer (2))

 

 

 

Par ERASME - Publié dans : Méditerranée & Proche Orient
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