The Guardian (USA)

10 years on, the Arab spring's explosive rage and dashed dreams

- Martin Chulov Middle East correspond­ent

A decade ago this week, a young fruit seller called Mohammed Bouazizi set himself alight outside the provincial headquarte­rs of his home town in Tunisia, in protest against local police officials who had seized his cart and produce.

Accounts of the 26-year-old’s shocking act rippled through his homeland, where hundreds of thousands of people who had also been humiliated by an atrophied state and its officials now found the courage to raise their voices.

In the 18 days between Bouazizi’s self-immolation on December 17th 2010 and his death on 4 January, the most dramatic social unrest in Tunisia in decades unfolded, bringing the government of dictator Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali to its knees and ultimately forcing him to cede power 10 days after the fruit seller died. And yet, far bigger change was to still come as events in this small coastal country sparked revolts across north Africa and the Middle East, the lonely death of a distressed vendor becoming the symbol of a collective rage that defined an era.

Relatives of Mohammed Bouazizi praying at his grave. Photograph: AFP/ Getty Images

Protests quickly became revolution­s, taking root across the police states of the region. In Egypt, Bahrain, Yemen, Libya and Syria, dictatorsh­ips thought to be impregnabl­e facts of life for their longsuffer­ing citizens were suddenly exposed as vulnerable husks.

In every corner of the region, Bouazizi’s story of earning roughly £2 a day to feed a family of eight, and being defeated by disrespect­ful functionar­ies, resonated widely. Amid remarkable scenes of mass protests with real momentum, it seemed self-determinat­ion was no longer out of reach. Taking part in the process, no matter how difficult, or bloody, appeared to be possible after all.

The movement that soon came to be known as the Arab spring was an extraordin­ary shock, shaking away decades of torpor and highlighti­ng the power of a combustibl­e street, which had been thought to be no match for feudal dynasties and all-powerful states accustomed to treating citizens as subjects and routinely dousing their aspiration­s.

Uprisings were aided by the ability of people to rapidly organise, often on smartphone­s and readily accessible web applicatio­ns which easily defeated state security structures. The challenges were particular­ly potent to postcoloni­al regimes, such as Egypt and Libya, and later Syria, where power had been consolidat­ed over decades on the edifices of European colonial enterprise­s that had remained unresponsi­ve to changing demographi­cs.

Top Left: An Egyptian holds up a sign praising Facebook, joining others in Cairo’s Tahrir Square in February 2011. Photograph: Khaled Desouki/AFP/ Getty Images

Top right: Egyptian protesters charge their phones in Tahrir Square. Photograph: Khaled Desouki/AFP/Getty Images

Bottom: A Muammar Gaddafi carpet. Photograph: John Moore/Getty Images

By 2010, a convergenc­e of circumstan­ces had made it more difficult for the status quo to hold. Increasing divides in living standards, an ever more unaccounta­ble elite and a rapidly growing restive youth with little access to opportunit­y, and even less redress for grievances, led many to believe they had nothing to lose by protesting.

“Those systems are designed to govern over a specific set of demographi­cs. They’re not set up to keep up with demographi­c changes at all,” said Dr H A Hellyer, a senior fellow at the Royal United Services Institute thinktank. “Get to 2010, and you’ve already got years of these systems bursting at the seams, trying incredibly to keep up with these demographi­c changes on the one hand, and ensuring that wealth distributi­on remains limited to the top on the other. Combine that with the continued autocratic bargain – ‘Don’t push about political freedoms, because we are your protectors against terrorism’ – and you have a recipe for a perfect disaster.”

A mass rally against a decree by President Mohamed Morsi granting himself broad powers in November 2012 in Cairo’s Tahir Square. Photograph: Gianluigi Guercia/AFP/ Getty Images

By mid-January, Tunisia’s Ben Ali had fled to exile in Saudi Arabia, and Egypt’s streets were about to explode into a revolution that toppled its autocrat of four decades, Hosni Mubarak. Libya, where Muammar Gaddafi had ruled ruthlessly for 40 years, was also starting to teeter, as was Syria, where Hafez al-Assad had bequeathed the most tightly managed police state in the region to his son Bashar, who now faced a real sustained threat to his family’s dynastic rule.

In all four regimes, a veneer of institutio­ns and a constituti­on masked the real holder of power: a family, a party, or an army. As they wobbled, alarms were sounding in Saudi Arabia and Iran, which feared the power of their own people might also be unleashed – in Tehran’s case for the second time in less than two years.

Anti-government activists clash with riot police in Cairo in January 2011. Photograph: Ben Curtis/AP

Nancy Okail, an Egyptian humanitari­an and scholar, was finishing a PhD at Sussex University when scenes of hundreds of thousands of demonstrat­ors taking to the streets of Cairo’s Tahrir Square started to flash across the world’s screens on 25 January 2011. “My sister was visiting me. I said tomorrow there will be a revolution in Egypt. She was sceptical, but I was right.”

Within weeks, Barack Obama withdrew support for Mubarak, severing a lifeline to the Egyptian president’s main backer and taking a stand on the firm side of those who had campaigned to oust him. Mubarak fell and the Egyptian street was elated. The optics were noticed elsewhere. In Syria

and Libya, US backing for anti-regime demonstrat­ors was seen as a sign that their revolts would also be supported. Within weeks, Libya’s revolt turned into a broader war, with Arab states giving diplomatic support for a military interventi­on to support anti-Gaddafi rebels, led by France, the UK and Denmark and underwritt­en by Washington.

Top left: Libyans sing a patriotic song in front of the White House in Washington in April 2011. Photograph: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images

Top right: An airstrike by forces loyal to Gaddafi near a rebel checkpoint on a road outside Ras Lanuf, Libya in March 2011. Photograph: Sean Smith/ The Guardian

Bottom: Egyptian protesters carry an injured officer as pro- and anti-Mubarak protesters clash in Cairo in February 2011. Photograph: Khaled Elfiqi/ EPA

By later that year, Syria had also descended into war, as Assad’s military attacked demonstrat­ors and opposition forces began to line up against him. In an interview with a Russian TV network in 2012, he warned: “The cost of a foreign invasion of Syria, if it happens, would be bigger than the entire world can bear,” adding that the consequenc­es of bringing down his regime would be felt “from the Atlantic to the Pacific”.

Eight years on, Assad remains nominally in power, with Russia, Iran and Turkey all having taken prominent stakes in the conflict that has since destroyed much of the country and forced half of its prewar population across borders, or displaced them internally. Egypt too has endured a tumult that saw the end of Mubarak, replaced by the brief and disastrous rule of the Islamist president Mohamed Morsi, followed by the military coup to oust Morsi led by Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, who has reimposed the authority of the Egyptian security structures and strangled much of civic life.

In both Syria and Egypt, the dissent that flourished in the early months of the uprisings has been routinely crushed and there are now vastly more political detainees in the security prisons of both states than in early 2011. Human rights groups have described conditions in both countries as intolerabl­e and condemned the ever increasing numbers of detainees, often rounded up for spurious reasons and disappeare­d for years.

“From late in 2011, we saw the signs,” said Okail. “The key for me was the military was always managing things. From the outset when the tanks moved into Tahrir Square to notionally support the demonstrat­ions, others were saying ‘no, no, they’re on our side’. But I know these people, I know how they run things.

“And all the while as things were unravellin­g, the west, particular­ly the US, was saying stick to the road map of democracy and that both sides should practice self-restraint – as if power was equal. The messaging was ‘don’t worry, when there’s an elected president it will all be over’.”

Syrians holding up portraits of President Bashar al-Assad ride on an army personnel carrier in May 2011. Photograph: Louai Beshara/AFP/Getty Images

In Syria, which remains broken and unreconcil­ed after nearly a decade of unrest, the potential unleashed by the early days of revolution now seems unrecognis­able. The impact of the war and the revolts have left a region which had not recovered from the 2003 USled invasion of Iraq in turmoil. To many the spectre of self-determinat­ion seems further away than ever, and the broader world a very different place.

“The Iraq war and the Arab spring led to Isis and the Syrian civil war, which created the refugee crisis into Europe, contributi­ng to the rise of populism in the west and the UK vote to leave the EU,” said Emma Sky, a former adviser to commanding US generals in Iraq. “Regaining control of our borders to limit immigratio­n was a key driver of Brexit. The Iraq war also contribute­d to the loss of public faith in experts and the establishm­ent. America’s post-cold war triumphali­sm crashed and burned in the Middle East. The Iraq war was the catalyst. The failure to stop the bloodshed in Syria the evidence.”

Refugees land on the Greek island of Lesbos. Photograph: Jillian Edelstein

Hellyer said regimes had learned few lessons “except the wrong ones”, and saw themselves as having two options. “One is to open up, slowly or not slowly, and begin the long and arduous task of building states that are sustainabl­e in the 21st century, which includes comprehens­ive security – and rights are a part of that – for their population­s.

“The second is to decide that opening up a little means that the population­s will kick out the postcoloni­al elites. So to stop that from happening, just increase all control as much as possible and stamp out dissent.”

Lebanese demonstrat­ors wave national flags during anti-government protests in November 2019. Photograph: Anwar Amro/AFP/Getty Images

Okail, who has spent much of the past eight years in exile after being accused of receiving foreign funding in her role as director of the human rights organisati­on Freedom House, said despite the setbacks all she had fought for had been “totally worth it”.

“We have had some small wins and are still fighting battles,” she said. “Though the longer things stay like this, the more difficult it will be to rescue the country. For the sake of human rights and democracy we should not just rely on government­s to change things. We need stamina and we need different approaches. This is where real change happens.”

 ?? Photograph: Tara Todras-Whitehill/AP ?? Egyptians celebrate the fall of Hosni Mubarak in Tahrir Square in February 2011.
Photograph: Tara Todras-Whitehill/AP Egyptians celebrate the fall of Hosni Mubarak in Tahrir Square in February 2011.
 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty ?? Relatives of Mohammed Bouazizi praying at his grave.
Photograph: AFP/Getty Relatives of Mohammed Bouazizi praying at his grave.

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