Why is Mugabe Still in Power?!?!?

Filed under: Corruption, Crime, Darfur, Democracy, Europe, Feature, Freedom, Human Rights, Jimmy Carter, Politics, Robert Mugabe, UN, Zimbabwe — Chaim on July 8, 2008 @ 2:57 pm CEST

In a move that is reminiscent of Darfur and the Congo the just “reelected” President of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe, has come up with a new tactic to assert the power he so blatantly stole:

Mugabe thugs raping teens: aid staff

DOZENS of teenage girls have been made pregnant after being taken into the bush and raped in torture camps by President Robert Mugabe’s youth militia operating near Mudzi, a town 160km northeast of Harare, human rights workers allege.

Read the rest on: Freedom’s Cost

Grim Statistics from Iraq

Filed under: Democracy, Iraq, Middle East, Near East, War in Iraq, War on Terror — Kemal on July 6, 2008 @ 8:11 pm CEST

Dr. Mohamed Elmasry, a Canadian engineering professor and national president of the Canadian Islamic Congress,  published an article on the grim statistics in Iraq.  It’s not clear where he gathers all of these statistics from, although there is one reference to the British Oxford Research Bureau. If any readers have insight into where these numbers come from, your comments and identification of sources would be welcome. (more…)

Michael Rubin: The Case Against the AKP

Filed under: AK Parti, AK Party, Corruption, Democracy, Erdogan, European Union, Freedom of Speech, Opinion, Turkey — Kemal on July 4, 2008 @ 5:27 pm CEST

Although Europe ignores it, the Turkey’s PM Erdogan is turning into the Turkish version of Vlad. Putin, writes Kemal. (more…)

Voter ID Laws Rankle Left

Filed under: Democracy, Legal Matters, Voter ID — marc moore on May 24, 2008 @ 10:11 pm CEST

Legal scholar Jeffery Toobin thinks laws requiring voters to show a valid picture ID before voting are biased in favor of Republicans.  This argument makes sense given the affinity of poorer Americans to vote Democratic.  But is that relevant?  Two principles of free and fair elections are contradictory, that we count every vote and that every vote be from a legal voter.  A picture ID seems to be the ideal compromise.

(more…)

The Real Winner

Filed under: 2008 elections, Democracy — marc moore on May 12, 2008 @ 2:24 pm CEST

The American people are the ultimate - and enviable - victors in the hard-fought Democratic nomination process, says Alan Wolfe:

After last week’s Indiana and North Carolina primaries, Obama has all but won the nomination — but democracy has been the real winner of the process. According to the Associated Press, 3.5 million newly registered voters appeared during the 2008 primaries, including unusually large numbers of women and African Americans.

(more…)

Every House Needs a Foundation

Filed under: Democracy, Egypt, Islamists, Jordan — Kevin Sullivan on September 8, 2007 @ 9:44 pm CEST

Jeb has a good post today at Foreign Policy Watch on the democratic gains the Islamists have presumably made around the world.  Here’s the crux:

When put in positions of power, most Islamist parties have pursued an agenda of expanding political freedoms, increasing judicial power, and establishing stronger human rights laws. Put simply, they’ve worked to strengthen democracy, not undermine it. The two most clear examples of this are in Egypt and Turkey. In Egypt, when the Brotherhood won around 20% of the seats in parliament in 2005, they began a major push that, according to the Council on Foreign Relations, centered around achieving “genuine political reform in Egypt.” Indeed, rather than trying to establish themselves permanently in positions of power, or attempting to create a hard-line authoritarian state, Brotherhood parliamentarians have in the past few years worked to build up democratic institutions and establish human rights norms in Egypt. In Turkey, when the AKP party won big in 2002, they didn’t overthrow democracy either. On the contrary, they have generally worked to strengthen democratic institutions, and have actually made major inroads on expanding civil rights for women and Kurds.

To some extent, I agree here with Jeb.  I think it’s true that you’ll see Islamists move to use democratic institutions in order to gain power; however I must take issue with his three examples of ideal, Islamic democracy. 

Jordan is in fact a constitutional monarchy, wherein the king can veto laws and dissolve the courts as he sees fit.  The legislature can overturn his veto with a 2/3 vote, however the executive maintains stewardship over the constitutional foundation of the country.  Same goes for Egypt, where Mubarak has “governed” for over twenty-five years.  The elections of 2005 were marred by controversy, and human rights groups like Amnesty International and HRW have repeatedly condemned Mubarak’s regime for stifling unrest and demonstration, which often stems from the Islamists. 

Michael is far more qualified than I to speak on Turkey, but to my knowledge, Turkey has a longstanding legal foundation based on a mostly secular style of law and government.  This is why the recent elections have caused some unease throughout the country, fearing a reversion to a pre-Ataturk society.

In all three cases, you have a state apparatus protecting the foundation of a predominantly secular government, vis-a-vis coercion or law.  In other words, the Islamists are allowed to participate, while kept at an arm’s length.  Perhaps with good reason–a better example of truly Islamic “democracy” is probably the Gaza Strip, where spoon fed elections created an anarchic scenario in which the majority party’s armed wing imposed total control over its own government.

Peter Viereck once said, while writing on the conservatism of Count Joseph de Maistre, that constitutional institutions were ”rooted in hearts, not handwriting.”  The three examples provided by Jeb have in fact relied on the state in some capacity to keep the Islamists at bay, lest they be allowed to blur the lines between Qur’an and state.         

(Cross posted at my blog)


 

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