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Egypt's coup has plunged the country into catastrophe

Falcon29

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Egypt's coup has plunged the country into catastrophe | Yahia Hamed | Comment is free | The Guardian

The military coup in Egypt in July 2013 was predicated on three deceptively simple arguments: Mohamed Morsi's year in office was a disaster; the people demanded his removal; the military would do better. As a former minister in the Morsi government I will not claim that we made no mistakes. We worked hard, and I believe our plans for unshackling Egypt from its autocratic past were sound, but we failed on many fronts. Morsi believed he could appeal to Egyptians' patriotism to put the country's interests ahead of their own. This didn't work with vested interest groups, particularly the army, security apparatus, old regime judiciary and corrupt businessmen, all of who saw that their privileges would be eroded in a new, democratic Egypt.

However, eight months after his overthrow it is evident that all three premises on which the coup was predicated were false. Many Egyptians have been demonstrating peacefully for the restoration of legitimate rule. Government employees have been in open revolt for weeks over the government's failure to fulfil its promise for 6 million workers to have the minimum wage. Textile workers have been on strike, and in Cairo, public transport came to a complete halt recently when 38,000 bus drivers went on strike. In its disregard for the livelihood of ordinary Egyptians, Sisi's regime arbitrarily halted the import of "toktoks" – the vehicle popular with low-income Egyptians. Thousands of toktok drivers protested.

Undeterred, the government is now proceeding with the fire sale of Egypt's once largest retail company, Omar Effendi, and thousands of its workers have been protesting, too. The public healthcare system has been virtually crippled by a doctors' strike; they have now been joined by pharmacists, nurses and dentists. The regime's response was to announce a "spectacular" discovery by one of their generals of a "cure" for HIV/Aids, hepatitis C and cancer – a bizarre attempt to gain popularity and distract attention from their own failures.

Energy is one area where the Sisi regime should have done well, given massive support from some Gulf countries. Yet, queues for diesel have been growing as the country grapples with a deficit in energy resources estimated at 30% of the country's energy needs. Once an exporter of gas, Egypt is now seeking to import gas from Israel.

Many foreign companies have left the country since the coup. Inflation and unemployment rates are at the highest for decades. Tourism levels have dropped precipitously. The budget deficit is expected to reach 15% of GDP. In a blatant attempt to curry favour with Mubarak-era oligarchs, the government signed into law an "investment edict" that precludes any oversight over privatisation of public assets or transactions between the government and investors. The firesale of the country's assets has been protected by law.

If only the country was maintaining some sense of social cohesion while it was being hurtled towards economic disaster, perhaps the Sisi regime could have claimed some victory. Instead, the country is hurtling towards economic disaster under the most repressive regime in the history of modern Egypt. Murder, torture, arbitrary detentions, and the confiscation of assets have all become routine. More than 23,000 are now illegally detained including hundreds of children and women; more than 4,000 have been killed while peacefully protesting. Many of those who supported the military coup are now themselves imprisoned, tortured and silenced. The latest change in the dummy government means there is now no one left that has any link to the 25 January revolution.

Life support comes from the regional autocratic dictatorships in Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Both were frightened that a successful democratic Egypt with democratic Islamist parties would inspire demands among their own peoples. They are using every dirty trick to support the counter revolution. The latest decree by the Saudi regime labelling the Muslim Brotherhood a banned terrorist organisation stems from their frustration with the military's failure to halt the rise of revolutionary forces. The same decree is full of unprecedented draconian measures to criminalise and punish any sort of dissent within Saudi Arabia – a clear sign of weakness and fear that the revolution will spread to their soil.

Meanwhile the world turns a blind eye. The EU and the US both took a clear stand against the now defunct Ukrainian government over the deaths of 80 protesters. Visa bans were implemented, assets frozen. But when it comes to Egypt, Catherine Ashton spends her holiday in Luxor, a few weeks after dozens of peaceful protesters were killed.

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Great and very informative article.

@Developereo , @hussain0216 @F117 @ResurgentIran @Umair Nawaz
 
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What do you think will happen to the Egypt’s military junta? I can't envision a future with electoral fraud, another 3 decades of strongman rule, permanent emergency law, etc...
 
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Egypt is in a mess

It needs effective goverment, this is not to say that the M.B was some sort of glorious all knowing goverment, but it was Egypts first step onto the path of democracy

Egypt needed to remain on this path and understand that the first years would be chaotic but continuous transitions from one elected goverment to another would create a more balanced system with hopefully more able politicians rising.

Instead its just gone backwards to create a divided society with no hope of a fair democratic system in the near future


Egypt better have good friends in the GCC because billions will be required to keep Egypt afloat
 
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What do you think will happen to the Egypt’s military junta? I can't envision a future with electoral fraud, another 3 decades of strongman rule, permanent emergency law, etc...

I honestly believe the people will explode yet again, this coup has brought Egypt back another thirty years. The same old military domination of the Egyptian society, they control the economy, the affairs, limit any freedom and don't have real goals for the nation besides serving their interests in the ever increasing corruption. Something has to change in the next two years if the military regime hopes to survive.
 
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Freedom isn't free, It costs folks like you and me.

Egypt will emerge as a powerful Arab nation without the ravages of Islamism.
 
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I honestly believe the people will explode yet again, this coup has brought Egypt back another thirty years. The same old military domination of the Egyptian society, they control the economy, the affairs, limit any freedom and don't have real goals for the nation besides serving their interests in the ever increasing corruption. Something has to change in the next two years if the military regime hopes to survive.

What the Egyptians lack is basic patience

If the M.B can keep the underlying revoloution/resistence strong I forsee them coming back strong, maybe not in the immediate future but in a short period of time

The pressure on egyptian society is massive & it will crack
 
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What the Egyptians lack is basic patience

If the M.B can keep the underlying revoloution/resistence strong I forsee them coming back strong, maybe not in the immediate future but in a short period of time

The pressure on egyptian society is massive & it will crack
They're finished.

It took them 80 years to get into power and blew it in 12 months :lol:

Now they are a designated terrorist group.

You will not see them in power in your lifetime.

You'll need to sit there in Bradford and suck it up.
 
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What the Egyptians lack is basic patience

If the M.B can keep the underlying revoloution/resistence strong I forsee them coming back strong, maybe not in the immediate future but in a short period of time

The pressure on egyptian society is massive & it will crack

I agree with you, one or two years time to get Egypt out of the mess it plunged in was unrealistic especially considering the refusal by some gulf nations to support Egypt in a time of struggle because they fear for their monarchy leaderships which are losing credibility by the day. It's been evident more and more Arab nations are moving towards moderate Islamist leaderships with democracy as seen in Tunisia, they're popular in every Arab country as well as they win the support of the people.
 
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just let the egyptians decide, this isn’t foreigners business

Dude, in this forum we discuss politics as we wish and are allowed to state out opinions, get lost with your 'stay out of their business' mantra. This is a military regime which doesn't allow Egyptians to speak their voices unless they are absolutely pro military regime. If you aren't you will be apprehended, beaten, detained and terrorized if not killed. Even liberals have been targeted in this crackdown.
 
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I've always said that we need to look at what happens in Egypt, because what ever transpires here will have consequences for the entire Mashregh and peninsula, as iEgypt is the geopolitical center of gravity in the Arab East.

I will not say whether current regime is good or bad. Its not my place to say, and its a sensitive subject.
All I know is that Egypt is large nation state of 85 million people, and its a people that are not apolitical.
They are highly political people which they have demonstrated with large mass revolt (2 times in the course of couple of years).
If Egyptians explode again in protests, no force can stop it. Not even the military...

Lets hope it all works out for the best for all Egyptians.
 
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Dude, in this forum we discuss politics as we wish and are allowed to state out opinions, get lost with your 'stay out of their business' mantra. This is a military regime which doesn't allow Egyptians to speak their voices unless they are absolutely pro military regime. If you aren't you will be apprehended, beaten, detained and terrorized if not killed. Even liberals have been targeted in this crackdown.

You & hussain0216 Non Egyptians,

for you Hazzy your opinion about Egypt is 99% chosen from what the outcome is to Palestine, which is your main concern here, not Egypt.

For Hussain who follows a more global Islam ideology he’s all about religion.
 
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You & hussain0216 Non Egyptians,

for you Hazzy your opinion about Egypt is 99% chosen from what the outcome is to Palestine, which is your main concern here, not Egypt.

For Hussain who follows a more global Islam ideology he’s all about religion.

This isn't about Palestine, this is about the Arab world and it's chaos today. We're going into an era were old ideas will no longer be accepted.
 
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