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![]() Democracy halted in Arab World, says Gulf debating forum
A rare public debating forum in the Middle East has warned Arab rulers that they have allowed democracy to stall in their region.
An audience of 350 people from throughout the Middle East, attending the first of a new series of Doha Debates, voted 64% in favour of a motion stating that ’progress towards democracy in the Arab world has come to a halt.’
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Wednesday, September 17,2008 14:33 | |||||||||
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An audience of 350 people from throughout the Middle East, attending the first of a new series of Doha Debates, voted 64% in favour of a motion stating that "progress towards democracy in the Arab world has come to a halt." Dr Amr Hamzawy, an Egyptian political scientist and Senior Associate at the Carnegie International Endowment for Peace, speaking for the motion, said modern Arab states lacked the checks and balances for parliaments and the judiciary that are fundamental to democracy. Arguing that freedom of speech and the rule of law had not been established in the vast majority of Arab states, Dr Hamzawy said "from Morocco to Bahrain opposition movements are weak, vulnerable and manipulated by ruling establishments." He said there were no excuses for not having moved further and faster to democratisation. "We"ve had enough time. There are long periods of liberalisation in our history. We were at more advanced stages in the 20"s 30"s and 40"s than now." He suggested that there were few excuses for Arab states not to have progressed to democracy if countries like Greece and Chile had successfully extricated themselves from military dictatorships. Dr Mustafa Hamarneh, CEO of the media company Al Mada, which publishes Jordan"s weekly Al Sijill newspaper, also supporting the motion, said Arab states saw everything from the perspective of the security apparatus. "We have been unable to build modern Arab states based on equality and rule of law. We don"t see independent media flourishing and the education system is in a shambles. We are at a critical stage in our development." Speaking against the motion, May Chidiac, a Lebanese television presenter and journalist who lost her left leg and one of her hands when terrorists blew up her car north of Beirut in 2005, argued that Bahrain, Lebanon and Kuwait, where women now have the vote, had moved substantially towards democracy in comparison to their position 10 years ago. "I lost a hand and I lost a leg, but I still believe we respect freedom of expression in Lebanon." She said democracy in the Arab world was a case of taking small steps and waiting for the right moment, as with the Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon. "It is up to the people to resist despotic governments. Sometimes peacefully, sometimes in a different way." Dr Salah al-Shaikhly, Iraq"s first ambassador to London following the fall of Saddam Hussain, said he believed many Arab rulers were now wary of blatant violations of human rights and that "rumours of the death of democracy in the Arab world were highly exaggerated." But neither Ms Chidiac nor Dr al-Shaikhly, were able to refute arguments put by the Chairman Tim Sebastian and members of the audience who asked them to provide examples of a single Arab leader who had been voted out of office by popular suffrage.
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