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  • Arabs should also turn their fury at their own

    Arabs should also turn their fury at their own

    International Herald Tribune
    Massoud A. Derhally IHT Monday, May 17, 2004

    AMMAN, Jordan To the majority of Arabs, the United States is a country
    of double standards, and its leadership expounds the arrogance
    and belligerence of an imperialist power. Thus the abuses at Abu
    Ghraib prison will be etched forever in Arabs' minds: If only the
    American people knew what their country did abroad, many Arabs think,
    if only Americans understood the anguish brought on by Washington's
    self-serving foreign policies, then they would understand why so much
    Arab hate is directed toward them.

    Unfortunately, most Arabs end the argument here. Yes, the repulsive
    prison pictures vindicate some Arab grievances. But if there is a
    lesson to be learned, it is that Arabs should be equally enraged by
    the deficiency of human rights in their own countries.

    Countless acts of violence have taken place in the Arab world that
    dwarf the abuse of Abu Ghraib. There are wretched human rights
    violations every day in the Middle East, yet they somehow aren't met
    with the same indignation and high standards of accountability Arabs
    hold America to.

    Why is that? The United States is a beacon of democracy, freedom
    and transparency. It is the very absence of these fundamental values
    that underscore the impotence of the Arab people. Arabs need to ask
    themselves why it is that so many places have experienced their own
    form of renaissance - be it Latin America, South Africa or Asia -
    and why they haven't.

    That is the lesson to be learned from this fiasco in Iraq. If
    Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld can exhibit some humility,
    so can our leaders in admitting their mistakes - and so can we,
    in our struggle to define ourselves in this century.

    It is true that America's unrelenting support of Israel, now anchored
    more than ever after President George W. Bush's unconditional
    endorsement of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's unilateral disengagement
    plan, provides ammunition to hate. But invoking the Israel card for
    most Arab governments has, by and large, meant giving the stamp of
    approval to crackdowns, the denial of civil liberties and the creation
    of systems that instill fear and paranoia.

    In this sense, Arab anger at America is a culmination of the
    frustrations in their own lives: the inability of people to vent their
    anger openly at their own governments, the failure to rise up against
    injustices committed in their own backyards, and the absence of checks
    and balances that in democracies ensure that those in authority are
    held accountable.

    Democracy, some say, is not viable or applicable for Arabs. Arabs need
    to be ruled by an iron fist, the argument goes, and the culture of
    the Arab world doesn't allow for the expression of different opinions
    or the coexistence of different ideologies. Such statements expound
    the very stupidity that lead to the massacre of Muslims in Bosnia and
    Kosovo, of Jews in World War II, and of Armenians by Turks after World
    War I. It is this line of reasoning that has fostered an environment
    that nurtures zealotry - a defeatist mentality that perpetuates the
    subservient role Arabs have become accustomed to.

    If there were a single transparent and democratic system in place today
    in the Arab world, those calling for reforms would be hailed and not
    arrested. Women would be empowered. Were pictures of torture, abuse
    and humiliation of prisoners to come out, then perhaps the region would
    escape this twilight zone and experience its own renaissance. So when
    Arabs look at those pictures of Iraqis being humiliated, they should
    also take a look in the mirror - they may not like what they see.

    Massoud A. Derhally is a freelance journalist and a former
    correspondent for Agence France-Presse.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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