Egypt’s Presidential Elections: What’s at Stake (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Raymond Ibrahim 05/24/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/05/24/egypts-presidential-elections-whats-at-stake/
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Egypt’s long awaited and much anticipated presidential elections—the
first of their kind to take place in the nation’s 7,000 year history—
are here. As we await the final results—and as the Western
mainstream media fixate on images of purple-stained fingers—it is
well to remember that there is much more at stake in Egypt’s
elections than the mere “right” to vote.
While some Egyptians are certainly voting according to their
convictions, the fundamental divide revolves around religion—how much
or how little the candidates in question are in favor of Islamic
Sharia law. In other words, Islamists are voting for Islamists—Abdel
Mon‘im Abul Futuh and Muhammad Mursi—whereas non-Islamists
(secularists, liberals, and non-Muslims) are voting for non-
Islamists, such as Amr Musa and Ahmed Shafiq.
Bear in mind that this is not the same thing as American voters being
divided between “liberal” Democrats and “conservative” Republicans;
rather, this election is much more existential in nature—possibly
cataclysmic for Egyptian society. For, whereas both American
Republicans and Democrats operate under the selfsame U.S.
Constitution, in Egypt, an Islamist president will usher in Sharia
law, which will fundamentally transform the nation.
One veiled woman interviewed yesterday at the voting polls put it
best: “We came to elect the man who implements Sharia (Islamic law).
But I am afraid of liberals, secularists, Christians. I am afraid of
their reaction if an Islamist wins. They won’t let it go easily. But
God be with us.”
Interestingly, while she sums up the ultimate purpose Islamists like
herself are voting—to empower “the man who implements Sharia”—she
alsoprojects her own Islamist mentality onto non-Islamists, implying
that if a Sharia-friendly president is fairly elected, non-Islamists
will rebel. In fact, it is the Islamists who are on record warning
that if a secularist emerges as president, that itself will be proof
positive that the elections were rigged, and anarmed jihad will be
proclaimed.
None of this is surprising, considering that Islamists have not hid
their abhorrence for democracy as an infidel heresy to be exploited
as a gateway to a Sharia-enforcing theocracy which will, ironically,
eliminate democracy. Some have gone so far as to insist that
cheating in elections to empower Sharia is an obligation. And,
rather than encourage Egyptians to vote for whom they think is best
suited for Egypt, days prior to these elections, various
authoritative Muslim clerics and institutions decreed that Egypt’s
Muslims are “obligated” to vote for Sharia-supporting Islamists,
while voters are “forbidden” to vote for non-Islamists—a proclamation
with threats of hellfire.
One of the blocs not voting for the Islamists consists of Christian
Copts, who make for some 12-15 million people. Not only does an AFP
report capture their mood well, but it demonstrates how Egypt’s non-
Muslims are so convinced that any Islamist president, including the
oxymoronic “liberal Islamists” like Abul Futuh, will lead to even
more intolerance for Christians—a reminder of reality from those non-
Muslims on the ground.
[V]oting lines were long, and the worry and tension felt by many
Christians was palpable.
“I don’t want the Islamists. If they come to power and I oppose them,
they will say I am criticizing their religion and who knows what
they’ll do to me? We can’t talk to them,” said 57-year-old Sanaa
Rateb after casting her ballot…. Nassim Ghaly, a young man with a
cross tattooed on his wrist in the distinctive manner of Egyptian
Christians, interjected: “God protect us if the Islamists come to
power and they control the parliament and the presidency at the same
time.”…. “What we want is a non-religious state,” which would
guarantee the rights of all religious groups, Sanaa Halim, in her
sixties, said. “The Islamist trends are worrying,” one of her friends
added, declining to give her name. “And what have they done in
parliament? Nothing, except talk about women and female circumcision.”
Indeed, above and beyond the recent clash between Egypt’s Islamists
and the military—where the former exposed their jihadi face, losing
some popular support—the elected Islamist-majority parliament is
increasingly seen as a disappointment, more interested in banning
toys that “humiliate Islam” and legalizing “death-sex,” rather than
addressing the country’s economic woes. As another voter put it, “I
voted for the Brotherhood in parliament elections. Now they want to
control religious tourism, this is what I got from them. The
parliament has failed.”
Likewise, Ryan Mauro reports that “the secularists have benefited
from a sharp fall in Islamist popularity. In February, 43% of
Egyptians supported the Muslim Brotherhood, 40% supported the
Salafist Nour Party and 62% felt that it is positive to have a strong
Brotherhood presence in parliament. A Gallup poll in April found that
the statistics fell to 26%, 30% and 47% respectively.”
Notwithstanding all this, perhaps the most decisive voting bloc
consists of those tens of millions of impoverished Egyptians who care
little about voting, who care little about Sharia or secularism, and
are more than happy to exchange their vote for a temporal boon.
These, the well-organized Muslim Brotherhood and Salafis—funded by
Saudi petro dollars—have been busy buying, including with food and
drink.
The outcome of the elections remains uncertain. While Egypt is home
to the modern day Islamist movement—giving the world several
headaches, including the Muslim Brotherhood, the “godfather of jihad”
Sayyid Qutb, and al-Qaeda leader Ayman Zawahiri—up until recently it
was also home to one of the Islamic world’s most secular and “fun-
loving” societies (it’s not called the “Hollywood of the Middle East”
for nothing). Yet, based on the spectacular advance of political
Islam in the last few decades, one remains pessimistic. (Copyright ©
2012 FrontPageMagazine.com 05/24/12)
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