Oroville Mercury-Register

After Arab Spring, a decade of upheaval and lost hopes

- By Lee Keath

Was it real?

It’s all been erased so completely, so much blood has been shed and destructio­n wreaked over the past decade. The idea that there was a moment when millions across the Middle East wanted freedom and change so much that they took to the streets seems like romantic nostalgia.

“It was very brief, man. It was so brief,” said Badr Elbendary, an Egyptian activist.

Elbendary was blinded on the third day of his country’s revolt in 2011, when security forces shot him in the face. It happened during a clash that became iconic among Egypt’s “revolution­aries,” when protesters and police battled on a bridge over the Nile in Cairo for hours, ending with the police scattering.

Today, he’s in the United States. He can’t return home. Many of his comrades from the protests languish in prisons in Egypt.

Uprising spreads

In December 2010, the uprising began in Tunisia and quickly spread from country to country in revolts against longtime authoritar­ian rulers. It became known as the Arab Spring, but for those who took to the streets, the call was “revolution.”

The uprisings were about more than just removing autocrats. At their heart, they were a mass demand by the public for better governance and economies, rule of law, greater rights and, most of all, a voice in how their countries are run.

For a time after 2011, the surge toward those dreams seemed irreversib­le. Now they are further than ever. Those who keep the faith are convinced that yearning was real and remains — or is even growing as people across the Arab world struggle with worsening economies and heavier repression. Eventually, they say, it will emerge again.

“We have lowered our dreams,” said Amani Ballour, a Syrian doctor who ran an undergroun­d clinic treating casualties in the opposition enclave of Ghouta outside Damascus until it collapsed under a long, brutal siege by Syrian government forces in 2018. She was evacuated with other residents to northwest Syria, and from there she left the country.

“The spirit of the demonstrat­ions may be over for now ... But all those who suffered from the war, from the regime’s repression, they won’t put up with it,” she said from Germany. “Even in the areas controlled by the regime, there is great frustratio­n and anger building up among the people.”

“Eventually” could be years.

The region is traumatize­d and exhausted by its most destructiv­e decade of the modern era, perhaps the most destructiv­e in centuries.

Across Syria, Yemen and Iraq, millions have lost their homes in war and struggle to find livelihood­s, educate their children or even to feed themselves. Armed factions have proliferat­ed in those countries and Libya, raking in money and recruiting young people who find few other options. Poverty rates have risen around the region, especially with the coronaviru­s pandemic.

What went wrong

Activists and analysts have had a decade to pore over why it went wrong.

Secular liberals failed to present a cohesive front or leadership. Islamists like the Muslim Brotherhoo­d overplayed their hand. Labor organizati­ons, neutered by decades of autocratic rule, couldn’t step up as a powerful mobilizer or political force. It’s perhaps no coincidenc­e that the countries with some success, Tunisia and Sudan, both had strong labor and profession­al movements.

The internatio­nal scene was pitted against the uprisings. The United States and Europe were muddled in their responses, torn between their rhetoric about backing democracy and their interest in stability and worries about Islamists. In the end, they largely listened to the latter.

Gulf monarchies used oil wealth to smother any revolution­ary tide and back reactionar­y powers. Russia, Iran, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates waded into the region’s wars, either sending their own forces or arming factions.

Ultimately, few expected just how wide some leaders were willing to throw open the gates of Hell to keep power.

Syria’s Bashar Assad proved the most ruthless. Faced with armed rebellion, he and his Russian and Iranian allies decimated cities, and he used chemical weapons on his own people, clawing back Syria’s heartland and main cities and preserving his rule.

In Yemen, strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh was forced to step down in late 2011 in the face of the protests. But he soon tried to regain power by allying with his longtime enemy, the Iranianbac­ked Shiite Houthi rebels. Together, they captured the capital and Yemen’s north, pulling Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries into a U.S.-backed campaign to rescue the government.

The resulting civil war has been catastroph­ic, killing tens of thousands and pushing the population toward starvation in the world’s worst ongoing humanitari­an disaster.

In Libya, the U.S. and European countries retreated from involvemen­t after their bombardmen­t helped bring down Moammar Gadhafi. The oil-rich Mediterran­ean nation promptly collapsed into a constantly shape- shifting civil war. Over the years, it has involved the many local militias, units of the old national army, al- Qaida, the Islamic State group, Russian mercenarie­s and Turkish-backed Syrian fighters, with at least two — at one point three — rival claimant government­s.

 ?? BEN CURTIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Jan. 28, 2011 file photo, anti-government activists clash with riot police in Cairo, Egypt, to challenge President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule. Ten years ago, an uprising in Tunisia opened the way for a wave of popular revolts against authoritar­ian rulers across the Middle East known as the Arab Spring.
BEN CURTIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Jan. 28, 2011 file photo, anti-government activists clash with riot police in Cairo, Egypt, to challenge President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule. Ten years ago, an uprising in Tunisia opened the way for a wave of popular revolts against authoritar­ian rulers across the Middle East known as the Arab Spring.
 ?? AMR NABIL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, center, with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, right, and his Yemeni counterpar­t Ali Abdullah Saleh, left, pose during a group picture with Arab and African leaders during the second Afro-Arab summit in Sirte, Libya, on Oct. 10, 2010.
AMR NABIL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, center, with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, right, and his Yemeni counterpar­t Ali Abdullah Saleh, left, pose during a group picture with Arab and African leaders during the second Afro-Arab summit in Sirte, Libya, on Oct. 10, 2010.

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