Egyptians: Stop Calling Our Revolution a Coup. By Kirsten Powers.
Egyptians: Stop Calling Our Revolution a Coup. By Kirsten Powers. The Daily Beast, July 10, 2013.
The military stepped in as a response to the outcry of the people, Egyptians tell Kirsten Powers.
Powers:
Egyptians
have been jubilant that their autocratic and dangerously incompetent president,
Mohammed Morsi, was removed from power one week ago. But they are also
frustrated with lectures from American congressional leaders and some American
journalists who have characterized the Egyptian people's popular uprising as an
undemocratic power grab. The Obama administration has avoided the word “coup,”
which would jeopardize under U.S. law the $1.3 billion in aid we provide to the
Egyptian military—but expressed “deep concern” over the ousting of Morsi.
If
there was one message I heard repeatedly in speaking to Egyptians who were
active in the protests, it was this: “Stop calling our revolution a coup.”
Their
president, the Egyptians note, was given the opportunity to meet the demands of
the people but instead delivered a defiant speech making clear he would
continue to rule in an undemocratic fashion. The military removed him, and Adly
Mansour, the head of the Egypt’s Supreme Constitutional Court is now the acting
president. He issued a decree Tuesday that calls for a constitutional
referendum in November, followed by parliamentary elections in December and a
presidential election in February.
Yes,
this is messy. It’s not what Americans envision when they think about
democracy. But the U.S. has been at this for centuries. It’s been a year for
Egypt.
It’s
important to remember that the military stepped in as a response to the outcry
of the people. The legacy of Morsi’s short reign was an economy in freefall,
electricity blackouts, and gas and water shortages. Morsi’s abuses were legion,
but among the worst was a constitutional declaration that included the edict
that “[t]he president is authorized to take any measures he sees fit in order
to preserve and safeguard the revolution, national unity or national security.”
Twenty-two million Egyptians risked their lives to sign the “Tamarod sheet” opposing
Morsi, which included their government I.D. numbers. “I was scared when I
signed it,” one 30-something Egyptian mother of two told me. Egyptians have no
memory of a government that doesn’t abuse human rights and repress the people
with vicious impunity. This is not signing a Change.org petition. In Egypt, signing
your name to a statement opposing the government is an act of immense bravery.
A reported 33 million Egyptians flooded the streets to demand the ouster of
Morsi, a number vastly greater than the 13 million votes that elected him.
The
idea that because Morsi was democratically elected Egyptians should wait until
the next election is simplistic and shortsighted. Lucy Shafik, who protested
daily in Cairo with her entire family, said via email, “If we…waited out
[Morsi’s] presidency for another three years, there wouldn’t have been a
country to rule anymore.” Moreover, those who turned out to call for Morsi’s
ouster didn’t believe there would be any more elections if he stayed in power.
“One election, one time” is something this region has seen too many times.
In a
May 2013 interview, U.S. Ambassador to Egypt Anne Patterson was asked to
explain how the U.S. was helping to address human rights violations, which the
Egyptian interviewer pointed out had “risen considerably since Mubarak’s
ouster.” Patterson replied that, “We do not agree with claims that human rights
violations are worse than ever under the new regime. It cannot be ignored that
freedom of expression has improved in a number of ways under the new regime,
exemplified by the media and the freedom to talk openly and publicly chastise
political figures. Look at the press, or any of the political talk shows on TV:
Egyptians did not have such freedoms under Mubarak.”
Two
months prior to Patterson’s statement, Bassem Youssef, a popular Egyptian TV
comedian sometimes called the Jon Stewart of Egypt, was charged with defaming
Morsi. The LA Times reported that “more of these complaints were brought in the
first few months of Morsi's rule than in all of Mubarak's 30-year reign.” The
same month as Patterson’s interview, prominent Egyptian youth leader Ahmed
Maher was arrested for leading protests against the Morsi government.
The
U.S. has had a real knack for getting on the wrong side of history in Egypt.
Maybe it's time to change that.