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COMMENTARY
These 'Teachers' of Democracy
Haven't a Clue
No Arab nation meets Bush's goals for Palestinians.
By FRIDA GHITIS
Frida Ghitis' latest book is "The End of Revolution: A Changing World
in
the Age of Live Television" (Algora Publishing, 2001).
July 1 2002
The grand irony of
President Bush's plan for the Middle East is that it sets goals for the
Palestinians that none of the United States' Arab friends in the region
could meet. Bush called on the Palestinian people to "build a practicing
democracy based on tolerance and liberty." All three--democracy,
tolerance and liberty--are as plentiful in the region as forests are in
the desert.
Adding to the irony,
the president promised that Arab countries, along with the U.S. and Europe,
would help the Palestinian people build their new democratic institutions.
To advocates of political change in the Arab world, the promise that the
same despotic regimes that put them in prison would help someone else
build democracy must seem peculiar indeed.
Are the Palestinians
supposed to learn from, say, Saudi Arabia, a country where, according
to the Human Rights Watch report for 2001, "freedom of expression
and association were nonexistent rights, political parties and independent
local media were not permitted, and even peaceful anti-government activities
remained virtually unthinkable"? In fact, before the crisis of the
last months, Palestinians living under the rule of the Palestinian Authority
enjoyed more political freedoms than did most Saudis. This is particularly
true of women, who in Saudi Arabia remain second-class citizens, affording
men all the rights of discrimination. Women are not allowed to travel
or get an education or a job without permission from a male guardian.
Then there's the matter
of freedom of religion, a subject about which the Palestinians could teach
Saudi Arabia a lesson or two.
Perhaps the Palestinians
can turn to that other good friend of the U.S.--Egypt--in their search
for an education in democracy. That's the country in which the president
won election for a fourth term in 1999, garnering close to 94% of the
vote. Now, there's a popularity rating even President Bush could envy.
The Egyptian president, now in his 21st year in power, faced no opposition.
No pesky problems with hanging chads and butterfly ballots in Egypt's
democratic process.
In terms of liberty
and tolerance, it's hard to think of Egypt as the ideal teacher. Religious
minorities, political activists and many others are subjected to the harsh
rules of the country's state of emergency, in place since 1967. And there
too, women face the horrors of so-called honor killings and rampant domestic
violence. The U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against
Women recently expressed its grave concern about the government's lack
of action to protect women from
marital rape, violence in detention centers and other forms of aggression.
Other countries in
the region have made modest progress toward democratic reform, but not
a single one has reached a level that could qualify it to teach another
nation about democracy. In Jordan, a country ruled by one family since
independence, the young King Abdullah II has continued his late father's
slow and careful march toward greater democracy.
Several Arab countries
in the Middle East, particularly in the Persian Gulf region, are making
tentative steps toward democracy, but the area remains the least democratic
in the world. The wave of democratization that washed over the globe in
the last decade somehow managed to bypass the Arab world. The responsibility
for that belongs, to a large degree, to the U.S. and much of the West,
obsessed with stability in the oil-rich region. Propping up the despotic
regimes of "friends" and "moderates" in the region
was seen as crucial to protecting the flow of oil.
Claiming now that
Arab nations will show the way to democracy in a future Palestinian state
is disingenuous at best. The reality is that the prospect of a true Palestinian
democracy is a frightening one for many of the region's kings and dictators.
Palestinians working
to develop a real democracy, one with personal freedoms, a free press,
freedom of religion and tolerance for differing ideas and beliefs, could
hardly do worse than imitating the United States' Arab friends in the
region.
Copyright
2002 Los Angeles Times
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