6/28/13, "Dangerous Divisions in the Arab World," NY Times Editorial Board
"Even in a region where violence has become all too commonplace, the killing of four Shiite men in Egypt last weekend seemed particularly vicious. According to news reports, a cheering Sunni Muslim mob armed with clubs, swords and machetes raided a house in a Cairo suburb where about 30 people were marking a religious festival and beat, stabbed and lynched the four men. Video footage showed the victims’ bodies, bloodied and motionless, being dragged through the streets. Among those killed was a prominent Shiite cleric, Hassan Shehata.
The incident illustrates a pernicious sectarianism that was largely
repressed by pre-Arab Spring dictators but that now threatens Egypt and
much of the Arab world. If left unchecked by newly elected leaders who
either exploit simmering historical animosities or refuse to address
them constructively, divisions will worsen between Sunnis and Shiites or
between Muslims and other minorities, like Christians, ensuring
prolonged regional turmoil.
In Egypt, President Mohamed Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood, the Sunni
Islamist party from which he hails, have failed to unite the
overwhelmingly Sunni country and its Christian and Shiite minorities
around a centrist agenda in the post-Mubarak era. Instead, they have
solidified ties with Salafist hard-liners in the Islamist camp; derided
opponents, including many secularists, as “enemies of Egypt”; and
demonized Shiite and Coptic Christian minorities.
The sectarian problem, however, goes well beyond Egypt. In Iraq, renewed
killing between Sunnis and Shiites has produced the highest death toll
in five years. Part of the blame falls on Prime Minister Nuri Kamal
al-Maliki, who heads an elected Shiite majority-led government that has
never made good on promises to re-integrate minority Sunnis, empowered
under Saddam Hussein then banished after his ouster, into politics and
the work force. In Bahrain, the royal family representing the Sunni
minority has cracked down hard on protests by a Shiite majority
population seeking a greater role in political life. Sectarian tensions
are also roiling Lebanon and, less so, Turkey.
Every country’s situation is unique, but to a great extent the regional ferment has been stoked by Syria’s civil war
as it spills across the border and ignites Sunnis and Shiites in
neighboring states to also attack one another. The conflict began more
than two years ago as peaceful protests against President Bashar
al-Assad, a member of the minority Alawites, a Shiite sect. Now with
100,000 Syrians killed, Sunnis across the region have become incensed by
Mr. Assad’s brutality against the mainly Sunni opposition, while
Shiites from outside Syria have joined the fight to defend Mr. Assad.
Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar — Sunni countries with broader strategic
interests — are backing the Syrian opposition, while Iran and the
Lebanon-based Hezbollah, both Shiite entities, are backing Mr. Assad.
Regardless of what happens in Syria, leaders in neighboring countries
need to move quickly to reverse the sectarian slide. That means stating
unequivocally that they are committed to the equal rights of all
citizens and to ensuring that Shiites and other minorities can practice
their religions without fear. Such principles are embedded in the United
Nations Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. More
broadly, it will require an acknowledgment that elections do not alone
produce democracies; that governments need to be inclusive; and that
nurturing hatreds, for whatever reason, inevitably backfires and makes
stable societies impossible." via Free Republic
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