http://arabnews.com/egypt%E2%80%99s-liberals-denounce-%E2%80%98shadow%E2%80%99-brotherhood

Egypt’s liberals denounce ‘shadow’ of Brotherhood


Shaimaa Fayed & Edmund Blair

Sunday 23 December 2012

Director Khaled Youssef took on the establishment with his films before Hosni 
Mubarak’s police state was brought down and now believes the arts can challenge 
the Islamists ruling Egypt after the revolution.
“Art will contribute greatly, just as it did in overthrowing Mubarak’s regime,” 
said Youssef, who has joined the opposition campaign against a constitution 
drafted by an Islamist assembly that is on the verge of becoming the basis for 
Egypt’s laws.
The constitution, fast-tracked to a referendum by President Muhammad Mursi, has 
exposed the deep rifts between Egypt’s Islamists and a rival camp of leftists, 
liberals, Christians and more moderate Muslims, at odds about how to shape the 
new nation.
The basic law won 57 percent of the vote in the first round and was expected to 
pass through a second round yesterday. The opposition camp says the document’s 
failure to win a ringing endorsement shows just how divisive it is.
“No constitution is forced on half of a nation oppressively and forcefully,” 
said Youssef, 48, a leftist member of the opposition Popular Current party.
Islamists, who have won every vote since Mubarak was ousted in February 2011, 
although by shrinking margins, say the constitution must be passed to complete 
the transition to democracy and Egypt’s laws and codes should be based on 
Islamic principles to reflect the wishes of a Muslim-majority nation.
For liberal-minded Muslims like Youssef, whose camp has struggled to organize 
against the disciplined ranks of Islamists, that vision means sidelining the 
rights of Christians, who make up a tenth of Egypt’s 83 million people, women 
and others who see Egypt as a diverse nation and a cultural leader in the Arab 
world.
“This constitution is heading to the dustbin of history,” said the director 
whose films sought to highlight the nation’s slide into poverty under Mubarak.
Rights groups say the constitution does not include enough explicit protection 
for women’s rights and point to vague language such as references to “national” 
morals. Liberals fear this means religious conservatives will use it to impose 
social restrictions that could hurt women, minorities and the arts.
The document has a distinctly Islamist flavor. While the source of legislation 
remains “the principles” of Islamic Shariah as in the old text, a new provision 
adds further details on what that would mean.
“Under the shadow of the Brotherhood and extremist groups the future of all 
Egyptians will no doubt be dark,” said Fatma Naoot, 48, a poet and columnist, 
who often speaks out on women’s issues and defends the arts against censorship.
Naoot, a liberal Muslim, refers to some of the radical preachers who are now 
common faces on television as “strangers” to Egyptians, adding: “But I am 
confident that Egypt will return to us soon.”
Defeating the constitution in the referendum now looks beyond the opposition. 
Their next battle will be a parliamentary election likely in early 2013. The 
last Parliament, dissolved in June, was dominated by Islamists.
Islamists bore the brunt of Mubarak’s repressive police state, but liberals and 
leftists fared little better. Some groups were co-opted, others were harried 
and their anti-Mubarak protests were routinely crushed by baton-wielding police.
The Muslim Brotherhood, founded in 1928, can draw on a social support and 
charity network it built up over eight decades, even as its members were 
jailed. The opposition have not yet matched that, even if groups like the 
Popular Current and Mohamed ElBaradei’s Constitution Party are expanding their 
reach.
“The Brotherhood faction and the extremist religious groups, are unfortunately 
only ruled by a sense of revenge for the 80 years (they spent) visualizing and 
longing for power,” said Naoot.
Like Youssef, she has become a regular guest on fiercely argumentative talk 
shows, lining up against Islamists. The shows have become nightly battlegrounds 
on Egypt’s future. “A woman in the eyes of those seated on the chair of power 
now is merely a ‘thing’ that has no decision or will,” she said, pointing to 
Egypt’s ancient history with its women leaders and female goddesses, and 
mentioning that in more modern times one of the earliest female aviators was 
Egyptian.
“Egypt will move on the right path if people stay strong and united in the face 
of Brotherhood fascism,” she said, using the kind of fierce language that has 
become more common as the political battle lines have hardened.
Both sides employed fiery terms. In a call for a protest in Alexandria this 
Friday in response to clashes between Islamists and their opponents last week, 
a Brotherhood official referred to the “ugly face of secularism with its 
animosity to Islam.” Islamists also say their actions are not seeking to 
smother the views of others but claim they reflect majority opinion, in a 
nation where most women are veiled, although that dress code does not indicate 
political allegiance.
Divisions, they say, are the normal way of politics.
“The whole world is divided and that does not mean the world will enter into 
global wars,” Brotherhood official Essam El-Erian said after the first-round 
vote. “Division in any vote doesn’t mean the start of a civil war or chaos.”
But the Brotherhood’s opponents say a constitution should not drive a wedge 
through a nation because it is meant to reflect the principles of governance 
not partisan politics.
They also say support for Mursi and his group may be ebbing away. A referendum 
on a temporary constitution, a parliamentary vote and a presidential election 
in the past two years suggest at least some slippage in support for Islamists.
The National Salvation Front, an opposition coalition formed after Mursi 
expanded his powers on Nov. 22 and then pushed through the constitution, has 
drawn tens of thousands on to the streets to oppose the referendum, although 
has not managed it with the regularity of Islamists.
Hassan Nafaa, a liberal activist and political science professor, was among 
voters who plumped for Mursi in the presidential run-off race in June when the 
alternative was Ahmed Shafik, an ex-military man and former prime minister 
under Mubarak. Mursi won with 52 percent of the vote.
But Nafaa said Mursi had turned to his own group and ignored other Egyptians, 
even members of the opposition who had backed him in his election. He said the 
president was simply dismissing the opposition as “liberals (who) do not have 
any real weight among the population”.


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