Robert Fisk writes:
The images of an Egyptian gunboat exploding off the coast
of Sinai last week were a warning to our Western politicians.
Yes, we support
Egypt. We love Egypt. We continue to send our tourists to Egypt.
Because we
support President Field Marshal Abdel Fattah el-Sisi – despite the fact that
his government has locked up more than 40,000 mostly political prisoners, more
than 20,000 of them supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood, hundreds of whom have
been sentenced to death.
The Egyptian regime continues to pretend that its
Brotherhood enemies are the same as Isis.
And Isis – in its dangerous new role
as the Islamist power in Sinai – has killed hundreds of Egyptian troops, more
than 60 of them two weeks ago, after which a military spokesman in Cairo
announced that Sinai was “100 per cent under control”.
However, after last
week’s virtual destruction of the naval vessel, we might ask: who does control
the peninsula?
Yet, while
the biggest battle is fought in Sinai since the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, we
psychologically smother this conflict with our fears about Iraq, Syria, Libya
and Yemen.
So relieved are we in the West that a secular general has replaced
the first democratically elected president of Egypt that we now support Sisi’s
leadership as benevolently as we once supported that of Mohamed Morsi of the
Muslim Brotherhood.
The Americans have resumed arms supplies to Egypt – and why
not when Sisi’s men are fighting the apocalyptic Isis?
To Egyptians,
though, it all looks a bit different. They are being treated to Sisi’s almost
Saddam-like mega-mind.
This includes his grotesque ambitions for a new
super-capital to replace poor old Cairo, to be completed in a maximum of seven
years, not far from the new two-lane Suez canal which must be finished – and
those who know Egypt will literally gasp here – in a maximum of 12 months.
The
“new” Cairo is going to be 700sqkm in size and will cost £30bn.
The unveiling
of this preposterous project a few weeks ago was accompanied by none other than
our own Tony Blair, who used to be a British prime minister but is now (among
other burdensome chores) advising the Egyptian president through a UAE-backed
consultancy.
This “spendthrift
dream of modernity”, as the American writer Maria Golia puts it, betrays an
indifference to Egyptians’ real interests.
Over 60 per cent of Cairo – the real
Cairo that exists today – was built in the past few decades and is spread
across miles of tree-bald rotting concrete estates of poverty and heat.
Its
thousands of newly developed villa-suburbs high above the city are largely
empty; no one can afford to purchase them. Could there be a better environment
for Isis?
So let’s take a
brief look at Sisi’s real Egypt.
Rather than rejuvenate the weary, fetid city
that Cairo became under the British and then King Farouk and then Nasser and
then Sadat and then Mubarak, Sisi wants to start all over again.
There is
already a New Cairo outside the original Cairo – it was constructed as an
expansion of the city under Sadat and Mubarak – so Sisi’s megalopolis will be
new New Cairo, a second attempt to alleviate social failure.
The President need not worry
too much about industrial disputes in his fantasy city
The Egyptian Supreme
Administrative Court has made strikes illegal on the grounds (Brotherhood-like)
that practising the right to strike – albeit legalised under Article 13 of the
Egyptian constitution – “violates Islamic sharia”.
The court has already
“retired” three civil servants and imposed penalties on 14 others for striking
in the governorate of Monufia, arguing that withdrawing labour “goes against
Islamic teachings and the purposes of Islamic sharia”.
Under Islamic law, the
court announced with almost Isis-style formality, “obeying orders by seniors at
work is a duty”. This was a very weird ruling.
The teachings of the Prophet
forbid alcohol consumption (mercifully, for millions of Muslims, cigarettes had
not been invented in the seventh century), but trade unions would have been
incomprehensible in any ancient caliphate.
Not that the Egyptian government
has much to worry about from its officially sanctioned unions.
Gebali
al-Maraghy, chairman of the Egyptian Trade Union Federation, declared in an
interview with Al-Musry Al-Youm newspaper that “our task is to carry out all
the demands made by the President … increasing production and fighting
terrorism”.
Former deputy prime minister Ziad Bahaa Eddin found the court’s
ruling absurd. “Didn’t we demonstrate against the constitution drafted by the
Muslim Brotherhood because it attempted to mix religion with the state?” he
asked.
True. Indeed, we in the West
are now encouraging a very familiar “new” state in Egypt: paternalistic,
dictatorial, haunted by “foreign” enemies – it’s only a matter of time before
the Egyptian government declares Isis an arm of Mossad – in which an ocean of
poverty is regarded as the very reason why ever more draconian laws must be
used against free speech.
The people want bread, we are told, not freedom;
security rather than “terrorism”.
Egypt is, in fact, following the
path of so many other countries that are being torn apart by Isis. For, if you
torture your people enough, Isis will germinate in their wounds.
Thus Sinai is now as much under
the “control” of Isis as it is of Egypt.
The Cairo bomb that assassinated
President Sisi’s chief prosecutor proves that Isis operations have crossed the
Suez Canal. And even the Egyptian navy can be attacked.
Was there ever a more potent
symbol of our choice? Between the devil and the deep blue sea.
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