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- <text id=90TT1625>
- <title>
- June 25, 1990: Islam:Ballots For Allah
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 25, 1990 Who Gives A Hoot?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 26
- ISLAM
- Ballots for Allah
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>An unexpected fundamentalist triumph in Algeria sends a shiver
- through the Arab world and beyond. Is the fear justified?
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by William Dowell/Algiers and Dean
- Fischer/Cairo
- </p>
- <p> At 1 in the morning, five hours after the polls had closed,
- Algeria's Interior Minister stepped to the microphone at the
- government press center in the capital city of Algiers.
- Speaking in a monotone, Mohammed Salah Mohammedi delivered the
- startling news: the fundamentalist Islamic Salvation Front was
- ahead in Algeria's first multiparty election since the
- country's independence from France in 1962. Eventually the
- scope of the victory became plain: the Islamic party took a
- majority of the municipal and provincial councils, while the
- ruling National Liberation Front (F.L.N.) captured only
- one-third of them.
- </p>
- <p> For Algeria, the returns affirmed President Chadli
- Bendjedid's commitment to the development of a multiparty
- democracy in a region characterized by dictatorships and feudal
- monarchies. For his efforts, Bendjedid is being urged by the
- fundamentalists to dissolve the parliament, which currently
- seats only members of the ruling party, and hold national
- elections. "Any attempt to resort to trickery," warns Said
- Sadi, secretary-general of the Rally for Culture and Democracy,
- a moderate, secular party that made a poor showing, "will
- inevitably finish in the streets with helmets against turbans."
- </p>
- <p> That prospect is sending a shiver of fear through the Arab
- world. The Algerian election represents the first time that
- Muslim fundamentalists have obtained a majority in a free vote
- in an Arab country. While some Arab leaders are flirting with
- reforms, most continue to cloak their disdain for democracy
- with self-serving warnings about the threat of fundamentalism.
- Algeria's returns are certain to support convictions that even
- a little democracy is too risky a gamble.
- </p>
- <p> Arab alarms are reinforced by the building fear of Islamic
- fundamentalism in Western capitals and Moscow. As cold war
- tensions disappear, some intellectuals and politicians have
- begun to argue that the East-West confrontation will be
- replaced by North-South hostilities, which is to say a rising
- conflict between the haves and the have-nots. Islam is a
- religion that has appeal for the deprived. Moreover, although
- Tehran has yet to successfully export its revolution, the
- determination of Iran's fundamentalists to spread their radical
- brand of Islam raises the specter of subversion throughout the
- region.
- </p>
- <p> Arguments like this, however, often fail to distinguish
- between the religious fanatics who garner headlines with
- terrorist attacks and the far more numerous Muslims who seek
- a greater say in their countries' policies. Anti-Islamic
- attitudes also tend to obscure the import of the
- fundamentalists' electoral gains. In Jordan's elections last
- November and now in Algeria, fundamentalist organizations
- offered the only strong vehicle for voters to register a
- protest against government policies.
- </p>
- <p> Many Algerian voters were not endorsing radical
- fundamentalism when they voted for the Islamic Salvation Front.
- Rather, they found common cause with the front's president,
- Abbassi Madani, who called the ruling F.L.N. a "party of
- failure." Promised Madani: "We guarantee the freedom of all who
- have ideas on Algeria's future." While such words are
- encouraging, Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini promoted a similar
- message before he returned to Iran in 1979 from exile in France.
- </p>
- <p> Madani's party has put forward no concrete proposal to deal
- with Algeria's sagging economy. There is no guarantee that he
- can control the radicals, like those who took to the streets
- last week chanting, "Oh, Jews! The army of Muhammad will
- return!" And his party's aim to establish the Islamic legal
- code, known as the shari`a, conjures visions of public
- amputations. Middle-class women are particularly anxious:
- Madani has proposed that women be paid to stay home and not
- compete in the tight job market.
- </p>
- <p> The outcome in Algeria is certain to provide a boost for
- Islamic movements elsewhere. The prospect that haunts is a
- militant tide that topples unpopular regimes and replaces them
- with fundamentalist theocracies. Some leaders are beginning to
- recognize that the most effective safeguard against radical
- fundamentalism--or any other dogmatism--may be to garner
- the consent of the governed. Among the countries that have
- taken tentative steps toward such reforms:
- </p>
- <p> TUNISIA. The country most likely to be shaken by the vote
- in Algeria is neighboring Tunisia, which also held municipal
- and regional elections last week. Unlike that in Algeria,
- Tunisia's Islamic movement, Ennahdha, was banned from fielding
- candidates. That decision no doubt stemmed from the strong
- fundamentalist showing in legislative elections in April 1989,
- when Islamic militants, running as independents, took about 12%
- of the vote. The ruling party of President Zine el Abidine Ben
- Ali claimed last week that it had garnered 99% of the vote--hardly a democratic outcome.
- </p>
- <p> Still, since coming to power in 1987, Ben Ali has steered
- a less anti-Islamic course than did his predecessor. He
- reopened the Islamic university in Tunis, pardoned some 10,000
- political prisoners, loosened press restrictions and encouraged
- the creation of non-Islamic parties. Ben Ali's gravest
- challenge may come from students and unemployed youths, who
- will no doubt be inspired by the fundamentalist success in
- Algeria.
- </p>
- <p> KUWAIT. Last week's election was called to select a 50-seat
- National Council that is supposed to develop guidelines for the
- future of Kuwaiti democracy. Kuwait has been without a
- parliament since 1986, when the ruling family suspended it.
- Nonetheless, ex-parliamentarians called for a boycott of the
- election because they believed the council would be powerless;
- although government candidates took all 50 seats, only 65% of
- the electorate voted.
- </p>
- <p> JORDAN. Bloody price riots in April 1989 convinced King
- Hussein that he needed to engage the public in the kingdom's
- political and economic problems. Last November he called the
- first national elections in 22 years. The result was telling:
- of the 80 parliamentarians elected, 34 were members or
- supporters of the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood. Although
- the moderate Brotherhood was the only organized opposition
- force to stand in the elections, Arab leaders read the outcome
- as a confirmation of their worst fears. While Hussein favors
- continued reforms, he retains absolute control of defense and
- foreign policy.
- </p>
- <p> EGYPT. Part democrat, part autocrat, President Hosni Mubarak
- is steering a zigzag course. He has allowed opposition parties
- to flower, and tolerates perhaps the most feisty press in the
- Arab world. At the same time, he has invoked emergency
- arrest-and-detention laws to crack down on radical
- fundamentalists. Mubarak's party controls the national
- assembly; the opposition benches are dominated by members of
- the Muslim Brotherhood, who had to run under other parties since
- the Brotherhood is banned.
- </p>
- <p> Mubarak is expected to dissolve the parliament and schedule
- new elections for the fall. The fairness of those elections may
- hinge on how Mubarak reads last week's returns in Algeria. He
- will hardly be alone among the region's leaders if he concludes
- that the threat of radical fundamentalism is too explosive to
- risk legitimate elections. Then again, he may take a lesson
- from Eastern Europe and recognize that countries tend to get
- the revolutions they deserve.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-