Arab News

Weakening Egypt’s civil society strengthen­s political Islamists

- MOHAMMED NOSSEIR | SPECIAL TO ARAB NEWS

CITIZENS who have valuable ideas and a genuine desire to serve their country should have a legal and productive space in which to work. Smart government­s should enable citizens to benefit their country by channellin­g their ideas and energy constructi­vely. Preventing people from doing so runs the risk that they will release their thinking and energy destructiv­ely.

Political Islamists are Egypt’s clear and present enemy. By default, their strength lies in the undergroun­d work they have been doing for almost a century. After the Jan. 25, 2011 revolution, we were all shocked when these secret organizati­ons managed to win both the presidenti­al election and the majority of seats in Parliament.

These entities are not concerned with civil society laws; they know how to reach out to their target groups in gloomy settings, injecting their audiences with false beliefs and mobilizing them whenever the need arises, often in harmful ways.

Egypt’s true challenge is about mobilizing its masses. Millions of citizens with substantia­l spare time could easily be either constructi­vely occupied or destructiv­ely engaged. Bringing citizens’ beliefs and activities to the surface is the only way to enable us to identify and fight the false beliefs of political Islamists.

The government has neither the capacity nor the means to argue with millions of misguided citizens; our best option is to rely on civil society to undertake this task and manage civil society activities.

President Abdel Fattah El- Sisi, a strong believer in the role of the state at the expense of its citizens, is confident that he can use the state apparatus to exert full control over civil society. But regardless of the strength of its apparatus, the stability of the Egyptian state can never be realized exclusivel­y by statesmen.

It needs the endorsemen­t of its citizens, accompanie­d by a functional rule of law that everyone complies with. Threatenin­g members of civil society organizati­ons with imprisonme­nt is underminin­g state stability.

Political Islam is still the largest political force in Egypt. While barring political Islamists from politics may temporaril­y weaken their influence in that sphere, it does not eliminate their entities or change the beliefs of their members. Confrontin­g political Islamists with an iron fist might intimidate people for a while, but it does not constitute a permanent and valid remedy for Egypt’s chronic disease.

The country has a very large population. Fragmentin­g and polarizing civil society may enable the state to better manipulate Egyptians, but if a crisis occurs, the state will need entities to talk to and rely upon to mobilize the people. Weakening civil society and reducing its activities strengthen­s political Islamists at the expense of the state. Egypt’s strength lies in its civil society, which carries out a large portion of developmen­t and charity work.

Our country needs a new civil society law that is formulated by people who have been voluntaril­y working in this field for many years, and that advises us on the best methods to engage their peers in civil society activities. The more we encourage Egyptians to work via proper, transparen­t channels, the better our country will be secured.

Restrictin­g civil society by promulgati­ng a law that threatens its members with imprisonme­nt will discourage many sincere citizens from taking part in the country’s developmen­t, opening the way for Egyptians working undergroun­d to expand their secret activities. Mohammed Nosseir, a liberal politician from Egypt, is a strong advocate of political participat­ion and economic freedom. He can be reached on Twitter @MohammedNo­sseir.

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