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A total of 75 activists, bloggers, academics, journalists, and social leaders from Morocco, Egypt, Kuwait, Iran, Syria, Libya, Algeria, Tunisia, Lebanon, Palestine, Iraq, Jordan, Bahrain, Yemen, Romania, Italy, and Spain held a dialogue in Tunis about democratic transition in the region.
What do an Egyptian journalist, a Palestinian feminist, a Tunisian blogger, a Syrian activist, and a Spanish quincemayista have in common?
Furthermore, what do the religious and secular, men and women, young and old within a particular country have in common?
Attempts to Divide
Each has different ways of bringing their ideas and initiatives into practice, and “we have witnessed attempts… to divide us [citizens], to highlight what separates us instead of our bonds and shared values. Some of these attempts to divide us have succeeded,” lamented Spanish-Syrian activist Leila Nachawati.
In spite of this, the three-day international conference, “The Democratic Transition in the MENA Region: From Revolution to an Active Citizenry, Non-violence, and Regional Solidarity,” that took place in Tunis from November 1st through 3rd, 2012 proved that these individuals struggling for the future of their countries still have more in common than not.
Facing Social Violence
Each of these individuals are facing societal violence, ranging from that exercised by the state or economic trends to that inspired by gender or religion, and each are using non-violent methods to combat it.
In these past few years, social movements have emerged all over the globe with the common desire to build participative democracy and implement institutional mechanisms to give citizens further control over the political process.
Citizens’ Power
Says Italian Senator Francesco Martone, “What struck me in observing the mobilizations in Tunisia and in Tahrir Square was the clear evidence that those engaged were not necessarily aiming at conquering power, they were exerting their power as citizens and people.”
Whether the host country possesses a consolidated democracy or is just transitioning from decades of dictatorship, the world is seeing a growing separation between populations and the institutions that are supposed to represent them.
The Arab Spring
Many of the factors that inspired the Arab Spring protest remain unsolved and the region continues to struggle with occasional violence that can damage the progress made by non-violent revolutionary actors who are simultaneously working towards a future of transitional justice, dialogue, and peace.
To address these ongoing issues, the meeting brought activists from MENA region together with their European counterparts to share and exchange their respective experiences and to find common points of reference.
In the past, movements in both regions have successfully used the physical occupation of public space, digital activism and citizen journalism, as well as legal channels to challenge repressive practices and institutions.
Alternative Media Sources
In the future, Arab activists can learn from the European experience by continuing to spread information digitally: not only by tweeting, Facebooking, and posting Youtube videos of successful campaigns, but also by creating alternative media sources to oppose the mass media that is funded by political interests.
This can include establishing community radio stations and employing free-source technology that is less prone to government collusion and copyright laws.
Using these communication platforms, movements should seek to relay information with a few simplified messages and especially work to highlight the connection between economic and political monopolies as well as focus on causes that affect everyone in the divided society’s future, such as creating a new constitution.
Commons Future
Luckily, in spite of the violence that threatens to pull them apart, many citizens throughout the region seem ready to work towards their common future.
A January 2012 study conducted by the New Libya Foundation and Tufts University found that 75% of Libyans polled thought “it is possible to get a group of people who are very different from each other to work toward a common goal.”
“This is the only way that civil society movements in the MENA region can succeed,” points out the President of the Foundation for the Future, Nabila Hamza.
Non-violence
“Non-violent movements must engage all sectors of society in dialogue, recognizing that moderate elements within each sector of society will moderate hard-liners when everyone is involved in the process of building a new country.”
Using these shared lessons as a starting point, conference attendees brainstormed on ways they could collaborate to realize non-violent region action, keeping in mind different national priorities.
A committee will be formed to continue the work of this international conference to meet biannually and form a global agenda.
This is the most important element necessary for non-violent movements to succeed and remain as pure in their methods as in their goals: to have a unified strategy made up of time-tested best practices, not simply reacting and defending against new state, gender, and religious violence.
*Source: Foundation for the Future. Go to Original. The Foundation for the Future is an independent, multi-lateral and not for profit organization, created in 2005 and fully committed to promoting democracy, Human Rights, the Rule of Law and reforms through supporting Civil Society Organizations’ relevant initiatives in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region at large.
2012 Human Wrongs Watch
Filed under: Africa, Middle East, Others-USA-Europe-etc., The Peoples, War Lords
2012-11-16 12:00:27
I’ve read the Koran …. and I’ll nothing to do with it or it’s adherants.