Mr. Martin:
Which Egypt are you speaking about..!
By: Dena Kamel and Mohamed S. Kamel*
Montréal, Canada
December 31, 2013
[This is a clarification on the
situation in Egypt in response to Patrick Martin article on Egypt published in
the Globe and Mail in Dec 18, 2013 titled "Egypt’s new charter stronger on
personal freedoms"]
While Egyptians are being called to a
referendum on a new constitution, the second in a year, they have become
divided on the coup and its constitution. The division is not ideological or
religious, as you can find liberal, Islamist, leftist, Muslims and Copts in
both camps. On one side stands coup supporters, defending the army dictated
process without any reasoning, repeating propaganda fed to them by Egypt’s
media. On the other side stand the anti-coup campaigners, refusing the entire
process, wondering why they lost the newborn democracy and at what price.
We really wonder from where Mr. Martin in his article in the
Canadian Globe and Mail on December 18th, 2013*, got this theory that “Egypt’s
new charter stronger on personal freedoms”? He claims that it eliminates the
religion state as if Egypt had a theocratic regime.
We all lived the aspiration of January 25th,
2011 revolution lead by the Egyptian people, not by any politician or any
political party, but by the people!
Less than 3 years after the removal of the
longest and worst dictator Egypt had ever known ‘Mubarak’, Egyptians are being
asked to vote again on a modified constitution; even though they already
approved one a year ago.
It might seem to some acceptable and
reasonable for a revolting people to change directions, but what was the
motivation of this change is the critical question that is looking for an
answer.
In 2012, Egyptians adopted a constitution that
is not perfect but acceptable from people writing their own constitution for
the first time of their life, a constitution being written by a people assembly
and not being dictated by anyone but their own will and aspiration, working
under the pressure from the “deep country” remained after ‘Mubarak’. Voted in a
free referendum and carried within itself a mechanism for modification.
As the newborn democracy crossing its second
year, the street started to explode under a heavy media propaganda spreading
rumors and creating a hostile environment lead by the old regime taking it to
the edge and labeling everyone of the new administration of wrongdoing and
labeling the entire process of failure.
The army was the main tool, using all means
and methods, to create the point that lead to the coup on July 3rd,
2013, removing the first freely elected president and suspending the first
people constitution, drawing a road map that people never approved in a
democratic process. And how can a democratic process happen under a
military coup?
While the outcome of this process is a drafted
constitution, drafted behind closed door without any real consultation by
appointed pro-coup people, Mr. Martin named them ‘50 notables’ who drafted the document as
‘healthy contingent’ lead by ‘Amr Moussa’ an ex-minister in the Mubarak regime.
Mr. Martin’s claims that the new constitution ‘reinforce
press freedoms’ and ‘Freedom of assembly and demonstration also is declared’
while all opposition media is being silenced under the military coup and
peaceful assembly has been targeted by killings and young girls have been
sentenced to 11 years in prison for manifesting against the coup. None of this
happened under the 2012 constitution before July 3rd coup, and a
campaign to arrest people refusing this drafted constitution is already
undergoing.
Mr. Martin gathered his information from the
pro-coup elite and they either never read the 2012 constitution and that
drafted in 2013 or they are just spreading propaganda.
Without going into the draft itself our
discussion is not complete, but we are not in an article by article comparison
to defend one in front of the other, we would just like to point out the main
differences between the legitimate constitution and the illegitimate draft.
The major changes include making the army a state
within the state, where the president can’t appoint his minister of defence, he
is not his minister of defence anymore, and nulling the article banning
Mubarak’s corrupted regime from politics.
We question the process asking why Egyptians
would accept the military coup, nulling five (5) free votes and creating a new
one. How can we guarantee the fairness of the process and any vote,
while?
·
all
opposition figures are detained and all opposition in the street is targeted by
the army and the police between arrests and killings.
·
no
one single opposition media outlet is allowed to operate
·
all
state agencies took one side (Police, army, juridical system, district
governments, media)
·
the
coup annulled the counting of the vote on the spot, and will move boxes to
count somewhere else
·
investigations
into judicial election fraud during the 2005 and 2010 elections periods have
been suspended and the same judges are back to administrate this vote.
and
·
What
would be the guarantee that the military will not do it again if the
self-appointed minister of defence disagrees with the so called ‘elected president’?
We think it is clear why this coup took place
and why the constitution is being re-written, and that is why we can’t
participate in this process and that is why we are calling on all Egyptians to
boycott the process that is defeating the revolution and handing the country
over to the army and the same old corrupted regime.
For all of this, we can’t accept a process that has been
dictated by a coup that is killing thousands of peaceful Egyptians while
promoting and freeing ‘Mubarak’ gangs,
We can’t accept to participate in
the counter revolution.
* Dena and Mohamed S. Kamel
Dena
Kamel is a Project Manager Montrealer, grown and educated in Montreal,
graduated from John Molson School of Business, Concordia University. Prior to the Arab spring, she dreamt of a
democratic state in Egypt, her birthplace.
Her relation with Egypt strengthen by the 2011 revolution, shared
millions of Egyptians disappointment in the military coup that shattered the
new born democracy.
Mohamed
S. Kamel is a Project Manager Montrealer Engineer born and raised in Egypt is
active in the democratization of Egypt since 2006.
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