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  • Democracy for Lebanon

    The New York Sun
    June 22, 2005 Wednesday

    Democracy for Lebanon

    by Nibras Kazimi

    'Lebanon has plenty of freedom, but very little democracy," the adage
    goes, suggesting that no one should mistake the holding of
    parliamentary elections in that country as a democratic exercise. But
    still, there are hopes for better, democratic days to come.

    And here's why: Two seismic developments occurred in the last two
    staggered phases of the Lebanese elections during late May and early
    this month that will eventually set that battered country up for a
    real functioning democracy. The first occurred when a maverick
    ex-general by the name of Michel Aoun unexpectedly took over the
    leadership of the Maronite Christian minority by trouncing his
    political contenders in the Maronite bible bubble of Kisrawan, and
    putting up a good fight elsewhere in mixed Christian-Muslim
    constituencies. The other happened when the traditional and powerful
    feudalists lost in the north of the country. Both are indicators that
    the Lebanese people are ready to change the old established political
    routine.

    In Lebanon, the individual is beholden to the luggage of sectarian
    identity and history. Individual ambitions have no room for
    expression beyond the stringent and narrow categories of what god one
    prays to, and who's your grandfather. Even the grand equalizer of
    striking it big in the realm of finance translates into communal
    leadership rather than national leadership. This system was set in
    place by traditional power elites that milked the country - and its
    entrepreneurial spirit - for all it had. However, as long as you
    don't question the setup, you are free to do as you please.

    The French colonial administration that drew up Lebanon as an
    enlargement of the Maronite enclave, and gave the Maronites the reins
    of power, created a very curious mistake. Those borders also included
    Sunnis, Shias, Greek and Catholic Orthodox Christians, Druze, and a
    smattering of other minorities. Lebanon became the incubator of a
    Middle Eastern contradiction: how to reconcile several thousand years
    of history and a multitude of identities that constitute the larger
    picture of the Middle East with modern, homogenizing ideologies. Not
    one single Middle Eastern country (all drawn up in one way or another
    by 20th-century colonial powers) can claim to have a homogenous
    ethnic or religious make-up. In such a country, and in such a region,
    can all the intricacies of history be dismissed in the face of a
    dominant, uniform Arab Islamic identity?

    Lebanon paid a price tag of 150,000 dead in its 15-year civil war to
    come up with an answer: No. The tension leading up to the civil war,
    and still pervading the political atmosphere to this day, was how to
    reconcile on-the-ground diversity in the face of the pan-Arab
    nationalism sweeping the Middle East in the 20th century. In the wake
    of nationalism's decline, a new all encompassing ideology has emerged
    in the form of Islamic fundamentalism, increasingly led by Al
    Qaeda-type Salafi-Wahhabists and a sympathetic and well-funded
    religious establishment in Saudi Arabia. But would such an ideology
    succeed where nationalism failed, and where would that leave a
    country with the heterodox makeup of Lebanon?

    Just north of the heart of Beirut, which is traditionally the bastion
    of affluent Sunnis and Greek Orthodox, is the Armenian neighborhood
    of Bourj Hammoud that is populated by the descendants of victims of
    Turkey's first round of experimenting with nationalism in the waning
    days of the Ottoman Empire. Their forefathers and mothers had escaped
    the wrath engendered in response to Armenian nationalism that sought
    to create a homeland in eastern Anatolia during the First World War.
    They ended in slums then situated on the outskirts of Beirut's
    coastline. Today, in that neighborhood, there is a very curious
    sight: the local branch of the Arab Bank has its marquee up in
    Arabic, English, and Armenian.

    A little farther north of Bourj Hammoud, the steep ridges of mountain
    ranges interrupt the coastline and abruptly descend into the sea at
    the Dog River. Over the millennia, many visitors to Lebanon have
    remarked on this geographical statement, and conquering armies, from
    the Babylonians through the Crusaders and down to the French, have
    left markers to show that they had passed through this point. Beyond
    it lies Kisrawan, where the visitor is immediately welcomed by a
    giant, arms-outstretched statue of Jesus Christ.

    Southward along Beirut's coast, one runs into the Shia shantytowns
    teeming with those that escaped the fighting between the Israelis and
    the Palestinians three decades ago in their southernmost heartland of
    Jebel Amil, where Shi'ism had been holding on against many oppressive
    odds since the schism that divided the early Muslims into Sunni and
    Shia some 1,400 years ago. Keep going along the coast, and then take
    a sharp turn left up the Shouf Mountains, where the Druze, a
    secretive sect of Muslims that went beyond the accepted bounds of
    orthodoxy a thousand years ago, hide out among enchanted forests of
    pine and a few surviving cedars, the latter needing a couple of
    thousand years to reach maturity.

    There has to be a different kind of ideology that makes sense of a
    country like Lebanon, and provides a workable model for the rest of
    the Middle East, and that can only be democracy. One indigenous
    Lebanese model, called the National Covenant of 1943, was a verbal
    agreement among the traditional leaders of the various communities to
    share power: the presidency for the Maronites, the premiership of the
    cabinet to the Sunnis, and the speaker's post of the parliament to
    the Shias. And what goes for the top posts devolves down the chain of
    bureaucratic hierarchy; even the 30 jobs at the fire department of
    Beirut International Airport are divided up along similar sectarian
    patterns. Should one need a job in government, and even if a remote
    village needed asphalt for a road leading to it, then the only place
    to go is to the respective leader of one's community, which suited
    the traditionalists just fine and cemented the power that they sought
    to inherit to their sons.

    But this model is a farce and is continually challenged and
    reformulated when the demographic trends of the various populations
    change. There are fewer Maronites as a proportion of the population
    than there were 60 years ago, and more Shias. The Lebanese need to
    come up with something different or they will always be beholden to
    the legacy of strife and civil war, something that turns incredibly
    messy and bloody within its natural and historical patchwork of
    communities.

    The journey toward democracy involves moving away from disparate
    sectarian identities into a unifying Lebanese one. The language for
    that is oddly encapsulated in the Ta'if Accords of 1989 that brought
    an end to the civil war. It calls for the annulment of sectarian
    politics and power-sharing and provides the first step: a new
    electoral law that allows the Lebanese to vote on nonsectarian lines
    for the parliament. The signatories of the Ta'if Accords were the
    ossified icons of the old way of doing business, the traditional
    leaders, and they conveniently kept this clause on ice. Now is the
    time to bring it forth and use it to cajole the Lebanese into taking
    their first steps toward both freedom and democracy.

    President Bush could help by appointing a special presidential envoy
    for democracy in Lebanon. He should pick someone of Lebanese descent
    (there are an estimated 1.5 million Americans who fill this category)
    and untainted by the past "status quo" policy of dealing with the
    Middle East. General John Abizaid of Centcom would be the ideal
    candidate, or otherwise the yardstick. The task of this envoy would
    be to sit down with the new parliament and get them to pass laws that
    facilitate the emergence of a new Lebanese identity. For example,
    there are about 150,000 households in Lebanon of mixed marriages
    between sects. In order to get a marriage license, a mixed-marriage
    couple needs to go to Cyprus or Europe. They are prevented from doing
    so in their own country. Legalizing same-citizenship marriages should
    not be such a hurdle and would find a supportive constituency.

    A new electoral law needs to be cobbled together that takes into mind
    the sensitivities of the traditionalists but charts the path forward.
    The Ta'if Accords suggest the formation of a House of Lords where all
    the sectarian chieftains can hold court and put on airs but not
    disrupt or corrupt the functions of government. New electoral
    districting can be drawn to map out enclaves of sectarian uniformity,
    thereby ensuring that those who get elected actually represent their
    sectarian communities, which is not the case under the current law.
    In order to get the ultra-insecure Maronites on board, the Lebanese
    Diaspora still holding on to Lebanese citizenship - overwhelmingly
    Christian - should be allowed to vote, and that costly logistical
    process could be underwritten by American financial aid. The Shias
    who are increasingly transforming themselves from a dispossessed and
    marginal sect into the comforts of the bourgeoisie, and who are
    closely watching the Shia-American alliance in Iraq, must be
    encouraged to give up their support for Hezbollah by allaying their
    fears of armed Palestinians, usually seen as the shock troops of the
    Sunnis. Saad Hariri, now leading the Sunnis, should be tasked with
    getting the U.N.-mandated disarmament of the Palestinian militias
    done as a prelude to disarming the Lebanese Hezbollah.

    General Aoun has illusions and aspirations of being a national leader
    and can deliver the Maronites at this stage. In an effort to
    dismantle the sectarian edifice of government, he can be allied to
    the smattering of democrats who defeated the traditionalists in the
    north. This is a golden opportunity coming out of a creaking and
    unsustainable structure, and the beginning of a grassroots challenge
    to the arcane traditional idea of a "free yet undemocratic" Lebanon.

    There is a lot more to be done, but only America can re-enter the
    Lebanese scene to push democracy forward. If democracy succeeds in
    Lebanon, then the rest of the Middle East has an answer as to what
    form of government and spirit of governance would suit their
    multidimensional and confusing region. Otherwise, Islamic
    fundamentalism becomes the only contender for a future vision.
    America would have to attempt to intervene on behalf of all the
    Lebanese, rather than following the model of the French, Saudi,
    Syrian, and Iranian interventions and getting involved on behalf of
    one Lebanese client community. If America can help make a success
    story of a thriving democracy out of a contradictory and wounded
    country, then the rest of the people of the Middle East will take
    notice as they grapple with similar questions.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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