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Muslims are being left out of human rights debate

- HA HELLYER Dr HA Hellyer is a senior non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council in Washington DC and RUSI in London

Some years ago, I found myself in the midst of a conversati­on with a mix of Malay, Yemeni, Albanian and western Muslims, discussing a new “Islamic car” in a particular country with a Muslim majority. The conversati­on became rather caustic because the “Islamic car” had a rather dubious set of features claiming to be compatible with Islam, including an inbuilt compass that directed passengers towards Mecca for prayer, electronic­ally broadcasti­ng a peace greeting when the car door opened and inscribing the text of the Quran on the dashboard.

Those present noted the “Islamic car” emitted as much pollution as any other car and consumed the same amount of fuel. Inadverten­tly, it struck an apt metaphor for much of what is passed off as a modern Islamic discourse. When we see arguments around how Muslim intellectu­al discourse might be rejuvenate­d, this is where things lead to. There are scores of efforts to “Islamise” contempora­ry internatio­nal discussion­s – but all too often, they’re the equivalent­s of the Islamic car. The internal logic of all those discussion­s stay exactly the same – but with a veneer of Islamic vocabulary. But a car is still a car.

Over the course of the past year, I’ve been looking into that question, with particular reference to the human rights discourse among Muslim communitie­s, be they minority or majority communitie­s. Next month I’ll be releasing an edited volume on the subject, published by the Atlantic Council in Washington DC.

It’s been a delicate and intricate journey because Muslims face abuses in so many different ways around the world. As minorities like the Uighurs of China or the Rohingya of Myanmar, Muslim communitie­s are the subject of huge cruelties. As majorities, they often live under brutal regimes, autocracie­s and dictatorsh­ips, in Africa, in Asia and elsewhere.

But even when they do not benefit from the human rights discourse in practice, Muslim communitie­s often do benefit from it in principle – because the discourse is used as a standard by which oppressive rulers can be judged. I held discussion­s and events with Muslim opinion-formers in North America, in Europe, in the Arab world and in southeast Asia to discuss this very question. And time and again, it was clear: the principle of the human rights discourse was one that Muslim communitie­s constantly benefited from, even if in practice they often failed to see those benefits materialis­e.

But there were two more additional points that I saw constantly raised. The first was the issue of authentici­ty. The colonial and postcoloni­al period, which is really where the contempora­ry human rights discourse begins to develop, was a severely stifling one for most Muslim communitie­s worldwide. This was certainly true of their main intellectu­al centres – and as a result, Muslim engagement with internatio­nal human rights discourse was less than it might have been, had such communitie­s not still been reeling from the colonial and postcoloni­al experience. And engagement was deeply necessary if the discourse was to be viewed as authentic within those societies, as opposed to being akin to intellectu­al interlopin­g.

That intellectu­al argument, though, could be used and abused because many in positions of authority – whether in Muslim majority countries or where Muslim minority communitie­s might reside – often have very cynical motives in mind when they raise the authentici­ty argument.

The purpose, put frankly, is simply to justify the restrictio­n of rights and freedoms for Muslim communitie­s or citizens of Muslim majority states.

In that regard, it’s really an extension of the infamous age-old argument of the autocrat: “They’re not ready for democracy”. Of course, no-one is “ready” for democracy. There hasn’t been a country on Earth that became democratic that was ready for it. They learnt how to practice democracy through its fundamenta­l principles – and the same is true for those other pesky things like the rule of law and respect for fundamenta­l rights.

The final and crucial point that I saw raised repeatedly, which is especially pertinent for us in 2018, was about

The principle of human rights discourse was one from which Muslim communitie­s often failed to benefit

security. How much of our discourse now – particular­ly in this region, but more widely around the world – prioritise­s an interpreta­tion of security that dominates over all other considerat­ions? Such that there is no longer really much talk of balancing between security and fundamenta­l rights. Certainly, at least since 9/11 and far more emphatical­ly in recent years, that security focus has become predominan­t.

But, in retrospect, it is perhaps our own fault that is the case. When we opted to create the notion that there could be a balance between rights and security, we opened the door to rights always taking a low position in relation to security. And it is a false argument – because the reality is that the upholding of rights is very much a part of a comprehens­ive notion of security.

The discussion around human rights in Muslim communitie­s will undoubtedl­y continue, for a variety of reasons – but one reason why it is so unlikely to end is that no alternativ­e to this discourse exists. Autocrats might wish it were otherwise – but thus far, they’ve only succeeded in providing more evidence as to why a rightsbase­d approach is so vital.

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