New Era

Egypt’s Nasser still a polarising figure

-

CAIRO - Fifty years since Gamal Abdel Nasser’s death, controvers­y over the legacy of the charismati­c Egyptian president who championed Arab unity lives on in Egypt as deep divisions beset the Middle East.

Best known for his colloquial charisma and pan-Arab populism, he enraptured listeners with his radio broadcasts and inspired enormous pride inside the North African country and well beyond its borders.

Nasser was feted as a bulwark against Israel, colonialis­m and poverty during much of his 16 years in power, first as prime minister and then president.

Early successes included the thwarting, albeit thanks to US influence, of an invasion by Britain, France and Israel in 1956 after Nasser nationalis­ed the Suez Canal.

Critics, however, saw him as a symbol of populist author i t ar i an i s m , economic folly and geopolitic­al imprudence which significan­tly compromise­d his standing by the time he died on September 28, 1970.

To mark 50 years since his death, his oldest daughter, Hoda, published a book giving new insight into the life of the divisive leader.

“Nasser : Secre t Archives” includes excerpts of his journal while he fought the Arab- Israeli war in 1948 and exchanges with US president John F. Kennedy, as well as Soviet ruler Nikita Khrushchev.

“All I did was recount the events as they happened, and explained the principles he followed by showing documents he wrote while an officer in the army and during his presidency,” she told AFP.

“It is up to people how they perceive his rule.”

A senior army officer, Nasser led a group of officers who toppled British- backed King Farouk in a 1952 military coup that later came to be known as the “July 23 revolution”.

He served as prime minister from 1954 to 1956, when he became president, until his death.

During his rule, Nasser dismantled the privileges of a landowning aristocrac­y that had thrived under the old monarchy, and pushed socialist policies including free education and substantia­l subsidies.

Alt hough ve r y popular, his efforts to establish social equality proved increasing­ly difficult to fund.

He initiated costly mega- projects like the building of the Aswan High Dam and nationalis­ed the Suez Canal, a move that prompted the 1956 attack by Israel, Britain and France, who were forced to withdraw under US pressure.

“He boosted people’s sense of dignity, and that is what Arab peoples miss as they recall Nasser,” said Mustapha Kamel, political science professor at Cairo University.

Political parties were abolished under Nasser, while authoritie­s launched a severe crackdown on opponents, including the Muslim Brotherhoo­d.

And Nasser ushered in decades of military rule, characteri­sed by extended emergency powers and the army’s significan­t, often opaque, influence within the economy.

“While he sought to abolish classism, his regime initiated the concept of the police state, and instilled a culture of fear of authority,” said Said Sadeq, political science professor at Nile University.

Kamel added: “He did not believe in democracy and used to declare that openly.”

“He is a historic leader, who represente­d key features of the 1950’s to 60’s - from battling colonialis­m and seeking social equality to underminin­g political and economic liberalism,” he added.

In his public speeches, Nasser assumed a populist tone and used simple Arabic to openly lampoon colonial powers and Israel.

But his assertiven­ess on the internatio­nal stage sometimes amounted to imprudence, according to critics.

In 1962, Nasser dispatched troops to back revolution­aries in Yemen against Saudibacke­d royalists, draining Egypt’s resources in a years-long quagmire.

But the decimating blow to Nasser was defeat in the 1967 Six-Day War, during which Egypt, Jordan and Syria lost key territorie­s.

- Nampa/AFP

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Divided legacy… Former president of Egypt Gamal Abdel Nasser.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Divided legacy… Former president of Egypt Gamal Abdel Nasser.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Namibia