Coupvolution ,By Ayisha Osori

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ayisha-osori 600“When are Africans in positions of leadership going to make and implement the right policy to loosen the grip of foreign interference? Complaining about interference is simply an attempt to shake of blame – just like President Jonathan and his supporters…”

It is too early to say  what Egypt teaches us. As things unfold though, there is a flood of commentary
with viewpoints falling largely into two (a coup or a revolution). However, the issues behind both analysis are the same. This is not how  democracy is practiced. Democracy is not ballotocracy. Democracy ‘as we know it’ is dead. Democracy is the will  of the people. Democracy is a process. There is foreign interference. Political Islam has been attacked. There will be repercussions. Islamic radicalism has been given the green light.

Those who believe that the July 3rd ouster of Morsi is a revolution or a  continuation of the revolution which started in 2011 insist that Egyptians  are protecting their democracy and the right to be governed a certain way. They  cite oppressing the  opposition, the amassing of constitutional and executive
powers andinterference with the electoral process as reasons. The second group believes  that the ouster of Morsi is a coup and has sounded the death knell for democracy in Egypt and other young democracies. Even worse, according to this  group, the coup has smothered in its infancy, any notion of peace between  proponents of political Islam and everyone else.

Fair. But what next and are there other ways to interpret what has happened and why?

From Nigeria, where the government has condemned the coup, what is interesting about Egypt can be
boiled down into 3: ingredients of a movement, defining democracy and political interference. Egypt was and is ripe for the upheavals that  have rocked it over the last two years. High unemployment, long periods of brutal/oppressive  dictatorships, increasing impoverishment, lack of goods and services, inflation,  rising crime etc. Some would argue that many of these  ingredients are present already in Nigeria…so what keeps the people here from organizing? Years of ethnic and religious politics? The culture of money mobilization?  Whatever their  differences, the Egyptians have allegedly been able to pull  millions together  around a common cause, something Nigerians did to limited effect in January  2012. It is impressive and encouraging.
The  generally accepted practice of democracy seems more important than the spirit  of democracy for  many. They argue that Egyptians should have allowed the political process to take its course. Egyptians should have translated the  alleged 22 million signatures in a petition against Morsi into votes during the  parliamentaryelections. What if elections never hold? Or, as is  admittedly the case in Nigeria and other countries, what if the election results are suspect? And what if, like is also the case in Nigeria, there is no succor from the courts onn election petitions because they have been compromised?
Uganda and Zimbabwe cometo mind. Is it possible that Egyptians having endured  centuries of dictatorships from the time of Pharaoh – now truly understand ‘the making of a dictator’ or the pains of religious imposition and no longer want to take  any chances?
Besides, even the most feverish opponents of Morsi’sremoval agree that Morsi  and the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) are largely to blame for the events which led  to July 3rd.
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Is it a  coup? Is it a revolution? Is it a coupvolution? Who cares, Morsi out by any other name would still be Morsi out. Why is he out?

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Morsi did  inherit serious problems. ‘The economy was in torpor, the body politic barely functioning and society   deeply polarised’ one article admits. However, Morsi seemed clueless and unprepared for the role for which he found himself and  stumbled from one mistake to another particularly on issues which touched on justice, equity and governance. People want results, not excuses and when you  are the President, the buck stops with you. If President  Jonathan gets  castigated when he points out ‘the problems did not start  today’ why can’t  Egyptians say: ‘considering our issues and your reaction  so far, we see a disconnect and want you out of there immediately.’ It comes down to competence  and experience – democracy is supposed to deliver certain benefits to citizens and protect certain inalienable rights. Lee Kwan Yew and  Singapore come to mind…their democracy worked for them because the social  contract between the  people and government was kept. When there is no delivery on  the social  contract how long do citizens need to keep playing at  ballotocracy before they decide their only option is to move to the Square?

Lumumba,Pinochet, Kissinger- it is no longer a secret that the United States and other countries  with a colonial history interfere in the economy and  politics of countries  tagged developing or global south. The same  allegations are  being made now about Egypt – the people are being  manipulated and misled.
Considering how feverishly Africa is rising, why isn’t our ascension rigged with interference checkmating smarts especially when we  already know what to expect? When are Africans in positions of leadership going to make and  implement the right policy to loosen the grip of foreign interference? Complaining about interference is simply an attempt to shake of blame – just like President Jonathan and his supporters constantly complaining about how  ‘certain’  politicians said they were going to make Nigerian  ungovernable if he won the elections. Right now only innocent children and Nigerians  are paying the price  for how ungovernable things have become.
As a result of what Africa has seen and experienced courtesy of democracy and  governance we should be curious; in an era of technology and information overload,  how long do citizens  have to prop up a government which is not delivering when elections do not  deliver the opportunity to vote out those in power? In  Nigeria we have  governors who have misruled for 4 or 8 years and then end up  with cozy seats in the Senate or done little but be non- threatening to the status quo and end up as presidents…doesn’t this prove there is something wrong? Do elections equal democracy every time?
I know what I think.
The  only issue that worries me about Egypt and indeed fair representation and participation across the world is, what to do with the tyranny of the  noisiest minority. What  percentage of a population has to want a thing for it to be  truly ‘popular’ will? If 14, 22, 30 million Egyptians out of 82M said ‘out with Morsi’  – are they the majority or the noisiest? And  if things go the way many predict with regards to political  Islam in Egypt we could well ask about the tyranny of the most violent  minority…just like our Jamā’a Ahl al-sunnah  li-da’wa wa al-jihād.
As we prepare for the  2015 elections, it would serve us well to put sentiments and  identity politics  aside. States are supposed to deliver on economic  development, security of the rights  and liberties of the people and the social contract between  state and citizens.
If not, then we have no business adhering strictly to one  definition of democracy– the focus should be the maximum good for the  maximum number. No excuses.

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