Egypt at the U.N. in 2015 [AL-ARABIYA]
September 29, 2015
It’s the annual meeting of the U.N. General Assembly this week in New York. A number of world leaders will address representatives of the globe’s population – including the Egyptian president, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. It seems only yesterday that Sisi deposed and detained a democratically elected president from office, Mohammad Mursi, following widespread protests. The international community has moved on a great deal since its initial reaction to that suspension of a democratic experiment – but not without a great amount of risk. The momentum is clear – the strategic direction is not.
While the popularity of the current political dispensation is difficult to ascertain precisely, there are no illusions in the international community about the popular backing of the Egyptian authorities domestically; though back in the summer of 2013, that might have been in doubt. The impetus of the international reaction to Egypt has been rather consistent – if Cairo can handle Egypt, then the international community will deal with whomsoever is running the show, and able to run the show, in Cairo. He can be an Islamist, he can be a military leader who deposed an Islamist, he can be an autocrat in power for thirty years – he’s just got to handle it.
This is unlikely to be the last time Sisi addresses the United Nations with little in the way of substantial criticism about his policies from the international community.H.A. Hellyer
Tough nut to crack
So, when the Egyptian presidency provides the impetus for good news, there are, as might be expected, many who then clamor to laud such moves. Indeed, it was good news to know that Sisi pardoned a hundred detainees on the eve of Eid al-Adha last week – because it is so rare to hear of such imprisonments coming to an end ahead of the expected time.
Looking for good news
It’s a treacherous and hazardous position to take. Arbitrary pardons are not the way to fix Egypt’s justice system – wholescale reform of Egypt’s justice system is the way to fix Egypt’s justice system. There are no short cuts in that regard – and there is precious little evidence to suggest that Cairo is interested in that regard. The country’s political elites and state structures are emphatically involved in what they see as a ‘war on terror’ – and that overrides other concerns, if they even have them, tremendously.The choice of the international community in 2015 is much the same as it was in 2013. When Sisi addresses the world from the United Nations’ podium this week, he does so as the president of a country in which he has staying power and a good deal of popular support. But he also does so as a president that presides over a system that remains in dire need of reform on multiple levels, not least in terms of establishing genuine and real methods of accountability for many abuses and excesses.In 2013, I argued that regardless of the popularity of the military takeover, that did not absolve Cairo in terms of ensuring fundamental rights for all, including opponents of the government, regardless of political hue, including Islamists. Political realities in terms of support and durability may be uncomfortable, but that discomfort should never be used as an excuse to hold powers to account. That is even more imperative when such powers engage in potentially counter-productive strategies, as many security analysts suggest Cairo is currently engaging in when it comes to its counter-terrorism policies.This is unlikely to be the last time Sisi addresses the United Nations with little in the way of substantial criticism about his policies from the international community. Egypt certainly requires extensive reforms in order for it to respond to its present challenges, let alone those that are on the way with such a young population – but it seems Cairo will have to learn that on its own. It is uninterested in learning otherwise from even the most well meaning friends from abroad. And it’s not really clear there are enough outside of Egypt who are so committed to otherwise, anyway. In years to come, there will probably be quite a few who will regret that, inside and outside of the country - but denial is not just a river in Egypt, after all._____________Dr. H.A. Hellyer, non-resident fellow at the Brookings Institution, the Royal United Services Institute, and the Harvard University Kennedy School, previously held senior posts at Gallup and Warwick University. Follow him on Twitter at @hahellyer.