Thursday, March 10, 2011

Still Fighting in Cairo - Foreign Policy Magazine

My article for Foreign Policy Magazine is out:


CAIRO — While the world turns its attention to the riveting drama in Libya, where revolutionaries are seeking to oust the dictator Muammar al-Qaddafi, the revolution next door in Egypt is entering a new phase -- one that is just as exhilarating and consequential as the protests that drove President Hosni Mubarak from power in just 18 incredible days.

In fact, the revolution may be gaining momentum. The Egyptian people endured Mubarak's reign for 30 years, but 33 days of Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq was all it took for them to threaten to take to the streets en masse to demand his ouster. Shafiq, who was appointed by Mubarak during the early days of the revolution in a blatant bid to seem reasonable without conceding much power, was widely seen, along with much of his cabinet, as a relic of the pre-revolutionary era and the man who had overseen -- or at least failed to stop -- some of the most violent attacks against peaceful demonstrators in Tahrir Square.

Shafiq has been replaced by Essam Sharaf, a former minister of transportation and member of the National Democratic Party's Policies Committee -- Mubarak's Politburo, if you will. Sharaf has nevertheless acquired the reputation of being an honest civil servant, having resigned from his ministerial post in 2005 to protest the government's handling of a major train crash. He also earned points with the revolutionaries, having himself led a small protest at Cairo University a few days before Mubarak stepped down.

Shafiq's sacking came just hours after a historic TV interview that saw the prime minister sourly criticized and altogether humiliated by the other panelists, and not long before a massive protest had been scheduled to call for his removal along with several members of his cabinet, as well as the dissolution of the state security apparatus -- known for spying on, detaining, and torturing Egyptian citizens at will -- and the release of political prisoners.

With Shafiq's metaphorical scalp still fresh, the protest went ahead as planned, and Prime Minister Sharaf himself took the podium immediately after the Friday midday prayer. Flanked, surprisingly, by Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed El-Beltagy (who occasionally grabbed the mic to shout a slogan or two), Sharaf was deferential. He saluted the revolution's "martyrs" and pledged allegiance to the crowds: "I get my legitimacy from you," he said. "I will do my best to meet the revolutionary demands and the day I fail I won't be here."

Standing below hastily printed banners showing his smiling face, Sharaf was met with a roar of approval. It was, effectively, the first time the Egyptian street celebrated a political appointment rather than an ousting.

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Read the rest of the piece here and come back for comments!


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