HA Hellyer – The Guardian Image may be NSFW. Clik here to view. ![]() A new campaign group, Tamarod (Rebel), took that demand and, in the space of a few months, turned it into the backbone of a movement. Tamarod does not lead that movement – and neither do those who lead the political opposition. Nor is the movement made up of the same group that called for the revolution in January 2011 that led to the fall of Hosni Mubarak – indeed, it has elements within it that were actively opposed to that revolution. Therein began the quandary of many revolutionaries – could they join hands with people who did not share their dream of a more progressive Egypt, and were simply against the abuses perpetrated by the Muslim Brotherhood? Image may be NSFW. Clik here to view. ![]() Many of the revolutionaries defended the right of the Muslim Brotherhood to participate in political life during Mubarak's tenure; under the military governorship that followed Mubarak, they were the loudest voices against the abuses of military rule, calling for civilian control; and when the showdown came between Mubarak's last prime minister, Ahmad Shafiq, and the Muslim Brotherhood candidate, Morsi himself, many backed the latter to keep their revolution alive. This next phase is not one where the "old" revolutionaries (as some backing the June 30 protests have taken to calling them) are irrelevant. On the contrary, they could be the best hope for Egypt to progress. If early presidential elections do take place, it is increasingly unlikely they will do so with the voluntary acquiescence of Morsi. It is far more likely they will happen with direct intervention from the military – a military that is hardly a democratic institution, and has little interest in total civilian control in Egypt. In that scenario, those revolutionaries will continue to agitate for the rights of all Egyptians – Islamist and non-Islamist alike. If early presidential elections do not take place, it is entirely plausible, if not a foregone conclusion, that the situation for Egyptians will worsen in the areas of civil rights. The battle for rights is one that these revolutionaries have never stopped fighting – under Mubarak, the military regime, and the Morsi presidency. They won't stop now. Image may be NSFW. Clik here to view. ![]() By alienating almost all other forces by a disastrous extra-legal presidential decree in November, the passing of a truly divisive constitution, and a deepening economic disaster owing to lack of competency, the Muslim Brotherhood has made the continuation of a Morsi presidency more difficult than any effort made by the deep state. It needed allies: not more enemies. Regardless of his efforts, the revolutionaries seem to have already made their choice. They continue to agitate for the original claims of the revolution, of "bread, freedom, social justice, human dignity", rejecting any role for violence or a military intervention – but insisting that Egypt's route cannot continue without the president placing Egypt's interests first. Whether Morsi stays or leaves, their struggle continues. Whether the Rebel movement succeeds or not, this country's story continues – and its revolution remains. President Morsi can make it easier – or harder. He can ensure a future for the Muslim Brotherhood in a freer, pluralistic Egypt – or not. The choice really is his. | ||||
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Mohammad Mursi Can Help Egypt’s Revolution to Succeed – or Not
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