Arab News

Economic and human developmen­t can change the tide of extremism, analyst tells Arab News

- SHOUNAZ MEKKY

The federation has reportedly invited Egypt’s top 50 constructi­on companies to contribute to developmen­t projects in the region under the slogan “Developmen­t and Constructi­on Against Terrorism,” a local news report said.

Federation Chairman Hassan Abdel Aziz told the Youm7 newspaper that some companies had already announced their intention to reconstruc­t some houses in the village and rebuild the attacked mosque.

Hisham Yousry, the federation’s secretary-general, was quoted as saying that the federation aims to support the army, police and people of North Sinai to counter terrorism with real developmen­t.

North Sinai has long been seen as a region that successive government­s have neglected; a lack of services and poor education and employment opportunit­ies mean the region could potentiall­y become a new gathering point for extremists, following the fall of Daesh in Syria and Iraq, analysts told Arab News.

“The sustained insurgency in the area began with the downfall of former President Hosni Mubarak in 2011,” Justin Dargin, Middle East expert at the University of Oxford, told Arab News. “The diminished security environmen­t was compounded by the chaotic aftermath of the Egyptian revolution that allowed all manner of groups to operate with near impunity.”

There is a long history of banditry and smuggling in the Sinai region, Dargin added.

“The security stipulatio­ns in the Egypt-Israel peace treaty of 1979 led to a weak security presence in the region which allowed weapons and drug smuggling to flourish,” he explained. “The area, due to sparse resources and general government neglect, provided a fertile ground for militant ideologies to take root and grow.”

Dargin claimed that the region’s current militancy began with Bedouin tribesmen disillusio­ned with the central government.

“The grievances of the Bedouin melded with the general upswing in Islamism which spread across the region during the Arab Spring. Additional­ly, the situation in Sinai became more combustibl­e due to the influx of foreign fighters and the forging of an operationa­l collaborat­ion between jihadist groups in Sinai and Gaza-based groups.”

The government’s apparent plan to make developmen­t a centerpiec­e of the fight against terrorism in the region “can make a difference,” one analyst said.

“Economic and human developmen­t can change the tide of violent extremism when connected with education and other programs. Poverty and unemployme­nt breed frustratio­n and anger,” Paul Sullivan, a Middle East expert at Georgetown University, told Arab News. “Giving the youth of the Sinai hope for their futures with a developing region can make a difference.”

However, he warned, “This takes time. One cannot just build new basketball courts and work places and expect immediate miracles.

“The region should have been a focus of human and economic developmen­t for decades,” he continued. “This is, sadly, yet another example of what is found globally. Developmen­t aid comes late in the process.”

Said Sadek, a political sociology professor in Cairo, is skeptical about whether developmen­t projects can succeed in North Sinai, given the current environmen­t there.

CAIRO: The Egyptian Federation for Constructi­on and Building Contractor­s will announce a new initiative on Wednesday to develop Egypt’s North Sinai region, promising to rebuild Al-Rawda village, the location of Friday’s mosque attack which left 300 dead.

 ??  ?? Smoke rises following an explosion close to the Egyptian side of the Rafah border on Tuesday. (AFP)
Smoke rises following an explosion close to the Egyptian side of the Rafah border on Tuesday. (AFP)

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