On the Necessity of a Civil State in Egypt
On the Necessity of a Civil State
By Amr Hamzawy, al-Shorouk, 18 October 2011
To tell you the truth, today, and in the days following the events of
Maspiro, I have become more convinced that the establishment of a civil
state – by which authority is transferred from the military
establishment to elected civil bodies, the relationship between religion
and politics is arranged, and equal rights are guaranteed for all
citizens – is the only way Egypt’s situation can be fixed. The coming
parliamentary elections are an important stage along this path: they
will either bring us and the civil state – defined as neither military
nor religious – closer, or will spread us apart.
The longer the transition period has lasted during which the Supreme
Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) runs Egypt’s unstable affairs, the
more SCAF has become mired in clashes with political and social powers
and transformed from an authority standing at everyone’s side to a party
in clashes and conflicts over politics and public affairs. The longer
the period has lasted since the SCAF has undertaken the job of the
standing security forces in protecting and securing public facilities,
and at times controlling the movement of protestors and strikers, the
more the military has become mired in violent confrontations, which both
it and society could do without.
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