CSID Bulletin Header in JPG


Forty senior American academics and career diplomats including more than a dozen former presidents of the most important professional association for scholars of the Arab and larger Muslim world, the Middle East Studies Association (MESA), have signed a letter to US President Obama and Secretary State John Kerry:


     

In an unprecedented statement, over forty senior academics and career diplomats including more than a dozen former presidents of the most important professional association for scholars of the Arab and larger Muslim world, the Middle East Studies Association (MESA), have signed a letter to US President Obama and Secretary State John Kerry calling for the Administration to demand the immediate release of blogger Alaa Abd El Fattah and other political detainees in Egypt, for Egyptian officials to suspend the protest law of 2013 and end the repression of free speech rights guaranteed by the Egyptian Constitution and international law, and end the regime of violence, including torture and extra judicial execution, that still governs Egypt after the electoral victory of Field Marshal Abdel Fattah al-Sisi as President. 



 

* * * * * * *

 

To President Obama and Secretary Kerry,

 

We, the undersigned academics, career diplomats and policy-makers condemn the intensifying assault on basic political and civil rights in Egypt, most recently epitomized by the June 11 sentencing of two dozen activists associated with the No to Military Trials movement, including well-known blogger Alaa Abdel Fattah, to fifteen years imprisonment.

 

The sudden conviction in absentia and incarceration of activists while police blocked them and their attorneys from entering the courtroom on a day scheduled for lawyers' briefs, is the latest and most glaring example of the systematic violations of internationally recognized rights of assembly, of freedom of expression, and of due process characterizing the political environment in Egypt today.

 

They are accompanied by the ongoing and widespread use of deadly violence by security forces on Egyptian citizens exercising their internationally recognized right to protest, the application of mass death sentences after severely flawed and politicized judicial processes, and the use of torture, long-term detention without trial and other forms of mistreatment of detainees by the government.

 

Such practices and policies undermine whatever positive impact elections and other formal democratic processes may bring to Egypt. Instead, they lay the foundation for deepening marginalization of ordinary citizens, intensifying social and political conflict, and ultimately even more violence. As we watch with great alarm the descent of Iraq into a potential civil war, and the even greater carnage next door in Syria, we note that beneath the sectarian and ethnic tensions considered to be driving these conflicts lie the long-term denial of basic rights to citizens, systematic corruption, and violence by governments against their peoples-dynamics that continue to define Egypt's political environment even after last month's Presidential elections.

 

The present regime of political violence, which began with and remains most fiercely directed against the Muslim Brotherhood, is increasingly focused on silencing all remaining revolutionary voices associated with the January 25-February 11, 2011 uprising. As we have seen in so many other countries, these policies require the demonization of more and more citizens as "terrorists," "traitors" and "enemies," against whom all manner of violence and repression are justified. In Egypt as elsewhere the end result of such policies, which have occurred with the acquiescence and even support of Egypt's regional and international allies and patrons, will inevitably be the disintegration of bonds of common citizenship and intensifying of social, political and economic conflict.

 

Such an outcome is unfolding in Iraq, as it did in Syria before it-and closer to Egypt, in neighboring Libya. It is also increasingly and dangerously evident in the Sinai Peninsula. The costs to Egypt of such destabilization, and through it regional and even global security and stability, are almost impossible to calculate. Yet the steps necessary to prevent such an outcome are clear.

 

The Egyptian government must immediately release not only Alaa Abdel Fattah and other protesters most recently sentenced in absentia, but all political prisoners and detainees. At the same time, it must end the politicization of judicial proceedings, halt the still rampant use of torture and other forms of violence and mistreatment of Egyptian citizens, and suspend the protest law issued on November 24, 2013, whose severe restrictions on the right of assembly and political expression violate core principles of both the Egyptian Constitution and international law. Such measures are the sine qua non for any meaningful transition to democratic accountability in Egypt.

 

We call upon President Obama, Secretary of State Kerry, and the Administration in all its capacities, to demand these moves and, moreover, to suspend normal cooperation with the Egyptian government - including the provision of military aid or sales and non-humanitarian economic assistance - until such practices are in place. Ignoring or excusing gross violations of fundamental human rights in Egypt, particularly with other countries in the region in the midst of dangerous political meltdowns, cannot be considered constructive or sound policy, or justified on the grounds of realpolitik. They will serve only to produce enmity, violence, destabilization and chaos on an ever-wider scale across Egypt, and through it, the region.

 

The world community, and particularly Egypt's most important ally, the United States, cannot afford to sit by while this happens.

 

 

Sincerely,

 

Nezar AlSayyad
Director, Center for Middle Eastern Studies 
University of California, Berkeley

 

Paul Amar
University of California, Santa Barbara

 

Barbara Aswad 

Wayne State University
Past President, Middle East Studies Association


Beth Baron
Graduate Center and City College, City University of New York
Director, Middle East and Middle Eastern American Center, Graduate Center, CUNY
Editor, International Journal of Middle East Studies

 

Joel Beinin
Stanford University
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Sheila Carapico
Coordinator, International Studies Program
University of Richmond

 

Juan Cole
Director, Center for Middle Eastern and North African Studies, University of Michigan
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Elliott Colla
Georgetown University

 

Michele Dunne
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

 

Alexander E. Elinson
Director of the Hunter College Summer Arabic Program
Hunter College of The City University of New York

 

John L. Esposito
Georgetown University
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Michael Gilsenan
Director, Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies
New York University

 

William Granara
Director, Center for Middle Eastern Studies
Harvard University

 

Frank Griffel
Chair, Council on Middle East Studies (CMES)
Yale University

 

Bassam Haddad
George Mason University
Editor, Jadaliyya

 

Yvonne Haddad
Georgetown University
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Sondra Hale
Outgoing Director, Center for Near Eastern Studies
University of California, Los Angeles
Coordinator, California Scholars for Academic Freedom

 

Mervat Hatem
Howard University
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Steven Heydemann
Georgetown University

 

Nubar Hovsepian
Chapman University

 

Michael C. Hudson
Georgetown University
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Adel Iskandar
Georgetown University


Toby Jones
Rutgers University

 

Suad Joseph
University of California, Davis
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Amb. Richard Kauzlarich (ret.)
School of Public Policy, George Mason University

 

Ira Lapidus
UC Berkeley
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Mark LeVine
University of California, Irvine
Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Lund University

 

Ann Lesch
The American University in Cairo
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Zachary Lockman
New York University
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Kevin W. Martin
Indiana University

 

Norma Claire Moruzzi
Director, International Studies Program
University of Illinois at Chicago

 

Karen Pfeifer
Smith College

 

William Quandt
University of Virginia
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Hesham Sallam
Stanford University

 

Laila Shereen Sakr
University of Southern California

 

Jillian Schwedler
Hunter College, CUNY

 

Sherene Seikaly
Director, Middle East Studies Center
The American University in Cairo

 

Jonathan Shannon
Hunter College

 

Samer S. Shehata
University of Oklahoma

 

Jeannie Sowers
University of New Hampshire

 

Joshua Stacher
Kent State University

 

Christopher Stone
Hunter College, CUNY

 

Ted Swedenburg
University of Arkansas

 

Chris Toensing
Editor, Middle East Report

 

Jessica Winegar
Northwestern University

 

I William Zartman
The Johns Hopkins University-SAIS
Past President, Middle East Studies Association

 

Stephen Zunes
University of San Francisco

 

 

Affiliations are provided for identification purposes and should not suggest institutional endorsement of this letter.

 

 

 


About CSID


By supporting CSID, you help to:
  • Create a better future for our children so they can have more opportunities for improving their lives and realizing their dreams.
  • Educate and inform Americans about Islam's true values of tolerance, peace, and good will towards mankind, including peoples of other faiths.
  • Improve U.S. relations with the Muslim world by supporting popular movements rather than oppressive tyrannies and corrupt regimes.
  • Replace the feelings of hopelessness, despair, and anger in many parts of the Muslim world, especially among the youth, with a more positive and hopeful outlook for the future.
  • Encourage young Muslim Americans, and Muslims everywhere, to participate in the political process and to reject calls for destructive violence and extremism.
  • Build a network of Muslim democrats around the globe who can share knowledge and experience about how to build and strengthen democratic institutions and traditions in the Muslim countries.


Center for the Study of Islam & Democracy

Membership/Donation Form 2014  
      
Name: ______________________________________________________________________________
 
Institution:___________________________________________________________________________
 
Address: ____________________________________________________________________________
 
City____________________________State______________Zip _______________________________
 
Tel.:________________________________________________________________________________
 
Fax.:_______________________________________________________________________________
 
E-mail:______________________________________________________________________________
 

I would like to join CSID as:
 
  Student Member            ❑ $20              Newsletter Subscription      ❑ $20
  Institutional Member      ❑ $200            CSID 500 Club                    ❑ $500
  Associate Member         ❑  $50             Founding Member               ❑ $1000
  Member                         ❑ $100             Lifetime Member                 ❑ $2500

  National Advisory Board          ❑ $1,000
  International Advisory Board   ❑ $5,000

I would like to make a tax-deductible donation for:   $__________

I would like to make a pledge to CSID for:
❑  $1000  ❑ $500  ❑ $200   ❑ $100  ❑ $50   Other________  


Please mail, along with payment, to:
 
Center for the Study of Islam & Democracy (CSID)

1050 Connecticut Ave. NW, Suite 1000

Washington, D.C. 20036


Donate Button

Become a Member button

CSID Brochure in English
Click here to read Brochure



Please donate generously. Your contribution to CSID is both tax-deductible, and zakat-eligible. Your contribution will make a world of difference.

The Center for the Study of Islam & Democracy is a non-profit think tank, based in Washington DC - dedicated to promoting a better understanding of democracy in the Muslim world, and a better understanding of Islam in America. To achieve its objectives, the Center organizes meetings, conferences, and publishes several reports and periodicals. CSID engages Muslim groups, parties, and governments - both secularist and moderate Islamist - in public debates on how to reconcile Muslims' interpretation of Islam and democracy.  CSID is committed to providing democracy education to ordinary citizens, civil society, religious and political leaders in the Muslim world, and has organized meetings, workshops, and conferences in over 25 countries, including Nigeria, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Iran, Algeria, Morocco, Egypt, Jordan, Turkey, etc.

 
"In just a few years, CSID has done remarkable work in facilitating the vital discussion about Islam and democracy in the United States and beyond. In so doing it has made an invaluable contribution to breaking down prejudice and misunderstanding and to meeting the crucial challenge of advancing human rights and democracy in the Muslim world."

                               Neil Hicks, Director  
                               Human Rights Defenders Program
 
 

"The Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy (CSID) plays an absolutely vital role in creating a platform for the voices of democracy and reform throughout the Muslim World. Equally vital is the role they play in bringing a better understanding of the diversity within Islam to the people of America. CSID's advocacy of Islamic values coupled with democratic principles needs and merits our support."                       

                              John D. Sullivan, Executive Director                              
Center for International Private Enterprise
 

"CSID's role is crucial in Muslim societies and in the West. It is instrumental in contextualizing democracy in Muslim societies by underscoring the areas where Islam values and democratic principles meet. The CSID also bridges this arbitrary and unnecessary gap between the Muslim democrats and the secular democrats, an essential step for making the establishment of democracy and effective participatory systems a mainstream quest. Further, the CSID's role in the US is equally important in presenting the moderate, tolerant and pluralistic nature of Islam."


                              Emad El-Din Shahin, Professor 
                              University of Notre Dame
 




For more on What they Say about CSID please visit our website:  www.csidonline.org
 



      Back to topbottom