Can Islam and democracy work together? Look to Tunisia and Egypt for the answer

Published May 3rd, 2015 - 04:00 GMT
Al Bawaba
Al Bawaba

If you want to know whether Islam and democracy are compatible, look to Egypt and Tunisia  

Beginning in December 2010 in a small town in Tunisia, unprecedented popular protests broke out against authoritarian regimes in the Middle East and North Africa. The people, long denied civil and political rights, demanded political freedom, dignity, and social justice. In less than two months, Tunisians and Egyptians forced out dictators who had ruled for decades.

Many hoped these events would lead to a just democratic order and serve the people’s demands.

Source: Muftah

 

Saudi Arabia and the war of legitimacy in Yemen   

Within hours of the launch of “Operation Decisive Storm,” it became clear that Saudi Arabia had the power to dictate the narrative of the war. The kingdom used the language of “legitimacy” to disguise the politics of power, to impose binaries that have become all too familiar since the onset of the “global war on terror”: legitimate vs. illegitimate, state vs. terrorists, right vs. wrong, Saudi Arabia/Arabs vs. Iran, Sunni vs. Shi‘a, and us vs. them.

Source: Jadaliyya

 

Iranians prepare for post-sanctions era  

As the agreement became the top headline of news outlets across the world, some in Iran were busy planning the next possible steps. Just three days later, on April 5, IranianPresident Hassan Rouhani chaired a meeting with his economic team. Pointing to the “new economic atmosphere” that has been created following the recent political agreement on the country’s nuclear program, Rouhani ordered his economic team to facilitate investment and active participation of the private sector in fields with high economic priority. 

Source: Your Middle East

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