06 February 2011

Sandmonkey: The Way Forward

I am reposting here the full text as it appears on Sandmonkey's blog as a safety measure in case his blog gets squashed by the regime. So here we go, and good luck to Egyptian people and to Sandmonkey.

To all bloggers who care: please repost the text below 
(with reference to the author - the link above)
Help Egypt!

Today started with two very important facts: 1) The Mass resignation of important Mubarak regime figures from their posts in the Ruling National Democratic Party, including his longtime crony Safwat ElSherif and his own son Gamal Mubarak ; 2) The number of people who called me asking what the next move for the Tahrir Protesters will be and were disappointed by the lack of a clear way forward to the movement. They feared the protests would lose momentum and this historic moment would slowly dwindle and die.
Now, I am not a leader of this movement, and god knows I would be loathe to name myself as a spokesperson for the 5 million individuals nationwide who have joined these protests. If anything, I am simply a promoter and a participant who is way too proud of the fact that this is a movement with no leaders or representatives. In many ways this has helped the cohesion and unity of those protests: people agreed on a set of demands that promote general democracy, accountability and freedom. Demands that promote self-governing and personal rights no matter what your ideological leanings may be. We thought that was enough, and now we are thinking it might not be after all.
If we are to assess the successes of the movement so far, there have been a few key victories, but not any truly major ones. Mubarak says he won’t run again, but he won’t step down. Mubarak will change the constitution but will use the same parliament that has election fraud indictment tarring over 85% of its members. Even with today’s news, what the NDP did so far has been more cosmetic than actual change. We shouldn’t be appeased by it. Mubarak is still President, Emergency law is still in effect, the parliament hasn’t been dissolved, new elections haven’t been called for and the constitution is still that flexible document that the ruling party can change whenever they see fit. Even though we appear to be winning, we are not by a long shot.
Now, regarding the way forward, so far we seem to have two options on the table : 1) For the Jan 25 protests to remain as is: anarchic yet goal-oriented; & 2) the Wisemen’s council , which is currently being promoted as the third option between the Government’s Stubbornness and the Protesters unyielding persistence . They are gaining traction amongst those who do need leaders to represent their views and negotiate with the government, and their proposal is worth considering. The problem with the Wisemen’s council as a third option is this: while it is respectable and contains prominent Egyptian leaders and businessmen, I am not sure what leverage they got on either side or if either side would accept it as a mediating force.
That being said, the status quo just won’t due. This lack of action and organization will be used against us (the protesters) in every way possible. The participants will start complaining about the lack of direction or movement leaders. The government will start complaining that the protesters haven’t offered a single person to represent them and negotiate with the government for them, and that the protesters don’t know what they want. Mind you, this is utter rubbish: It’s not that the protesters don’t know what they want (you can read about their demands everywhere), it’s that their demands are so nonnegotiable for them, that it makes no sense for them to engage in negotiations until a number of those demands get realized. Thus, Gridlock!
So here are my two cents: next time when you head to Tahrir, alongside blankets and food and medicine, please get some foldable tables, chairs, papers, pens, a laptop and a USB connection. Set up a bunch of tables and start registering the protesters. Get their names, ages, addresses & districts. Based on location, start organizing them into committees, and then have those committees elect leaders or representatives. Do the same in Alex, In Mansoura, in Suez, in every major Egyptian city in which the Protesters braved police suppression and came out in the thousands. Protect the Data with your life. Get encryption programs to ensure the security of the data. Use web-based tools like Google documents to input the data in, thus ensuring that even if your laptops get confiscated by State Security Goons, they won’t find anything on your harddrives. Have people outside of Egypt back-up your data daily on secure servers. Then, start building the structure.
You see, with such Proper citizen organization and segmentation, we’ll have the contact information and location of all the protesters that showed up, and that could be transformed into voting blocks in parliamentary districts: i.e. a foundation for an Egyptian Unity party. That Egyptian Unity Party will be an Umbrella party that promotes equality, democracy & accountability, without any ideological slants. It should be centrist, because we don’t want any boring Left vs. Right squabbling at that stage. Once you institute the structure, start educating the members on their rights and their obligations as citizens. Convince them to bring their friends and relatives into meeting. Establish voters’ critical mass , all under that party.
The Egyptian Unity Party, however, will not be a permanent structure, but rather a transitional entity with a clear and direct purpose: create the grassroots organization to take back the parliament and presidency in the next elections. Once sufficient votes and seats have been obtained, the party will amend the constitution to promote civil liberties, plurality, and truly democratic elections. Once that constitution is in place, the party can disband, and its elected members can start forming their own parties and collations, based on their personal beliefs and ideologies, or they can join any of the existing parties, and breathe some life into their decaying carcasses. We will end up with an actual political process and representative political parties that will actually discuss policy and have to represent those who voted for them so that they can get re-elected. Democracy in action. An old but brilliant concept. A way to ensure that no matter what, we will have a huge influence on who becomes the next Egyptian President come election day in September.
I am extremely hopeful we can do this. So far we have proved all the critics and the haters wrong. It’s time to do that again!

12 comments:

Dick Stanley said...

Who knows? Maybe it will work.

SnoopyTheGoon said...

Hopefully.

Anonymous said...

He is a very courageous man., who hates the <span>Mubarak regime. What he does not understand  is that the Muslim Brotherhood is far more dangerous.</span>

David All said...

Sandmonkey is right. If the demonstrators are going to be effective in pushing Mubarak & Co. out, they have to have some form of political organization. What he is proposing sounds like a workable solution.

Question: While Mubarak has said that he would not run for another term as President, has Mubarak said anythig about his son Gamal running for President? Gamal is widely believed to have been chosen to suceed his father as Pharoah, ah I mean President, the same way Bashir Assad in Syria succeed his dad, Hafez. 

Note: A first-rate  historical film is the 1952 movie about the Mexican Revolution of 1910-1920, "Viva Zapata" with Marlon Brando and Anthony Quinn. There are more than a few parrallels between the events dramatized in that film and the current situation in Egypt.  

SnoopyTheGoon said...

I am not sure that he doesn't understand. He is an optimist, that's all.

SnoopyTheGoon said...

As far as I understand, Mubarak promised that his son is out of the race.

Anonymous said...

Maybe SandMonkey should read this

<span>EGYPTIAN MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD PRESSES GOVERNMENT FOR NUCLEAR WEAPONS</span>




http://www.wmdinsights.com/I10/I10_ME3_EgyptianMuslim.htm

SnoopyTheGoon said...

Thanks for the link. I think Sandmonkey understands the hazards.

Anonymous said...

Maybe he hates <span>Mubarak</span>  more than he loves the truth.

SnoopyTheGoon said...

Could be, but there is no contradiction between hating Mubarak and seeing the truth.

Anonymous said...

Maybe you should read Barry Rubin

http://rubinreports.blogspot.com/2011/02/news-flash-mubaraks-not-resigning-and.html

SnoopyTheGoon said...

I do. I did.