The Path Forward for
Restoring Democracy in Egypt
Dr. Maha Azzam, head of the Egyptian Revolutionary Council, stated that the current regime led by General Sisi is a dictatorial regime, using
oppression, rape and torture as means of governing. She argued that the threat of extremism is higher with an oppressive regime and that the general environment in Egypt was deteriorating and untenable. The goal of Egyptians is to restore democracy and not to be controlled by the military. Sisi's regime is unstable and unsustainable does not deserve support from the U.S. and Europe. She argued that backing Sisi is to abandon the obligation to defend basic human rights and principles of democracy, which has underpinned official U.S. policy for many years. The resistance in Egypt will continue, and CSO's in Egypt will continue to play an important role in facing this regime. She stated that continuing the revolution is the sole option to end the military hold on power and restore civil society, so that freedom and respect for law and order will be guaranteed.
Dr. Sarwat Nefei was recently elected speaker of the Egyptian parliament in
exile. He emphasized that Egypt is dominated and controlled by the military.
The military is also controlling the media, which has been offering a significant support to the dictatorial regime. The military has killed hundreds of protesters, including a mass killing during the "Rabaa" protest [which Human Rights Watch called "one of the world's largest killings of demonstrators in a single day in recent history."] The government has detained most of the Muslim Brotherhood supporters and a wide range of representatives of civil society. There is a need for a united voice against Sisi and the military regime, a first step toward restoring democracy in Egypt. Dr. Nafei put Sisi's supporters in two categories: people who are afraid and people who benefit from the military system. He pointed out the differences between Morsi and Sisi, stating that the freedom of speech and protesting was guaranteed in Morsi's era while these rights are abrogated by the current regime. The speaker stressed that stability will never be achieved through dictatorship.
regime in August 2014 and has led the way in calling for accountability regarding the Rabaa massacres and other human rights abuses. He pointed out that Dr. Abdul-Mawgoud Dardery served as President of 2012 Egyptian Parliament's Foreign Relations Committee. Dardery stated that a key crime
of the Sisi regime was that it killed at least 3,000 Egyptians, including at least 1,000 members of the Muslim Brotherhood. The regime imposed sweeping bans against any public demonstrations and arrested tens of thousands, sending many of them to secret prisons and torture centers. Peaceful protesters attempting to commemorate the fourth anniversary of the revolution were slaughtered, with sixteen people killed in protests over the course of that one weekend. The military system will continue killing Egyptians to sustain its power and control over Egypt and its resources. The country is still going through a period of political turmoil, resulting in grave violations of the right to a fair trial, freedom of expression and association, freedom of religion and gender equality. Regarding the international reaction, he indicated that the EU issued a resolution against Sisi and the violation of human rights. The U.S. interests are not in sustaining a system that relies on killing and torturing its opposition.
Dr. Mohamed Heshmat, Deputy of the Egyptian Parliament in Exile, began by stating that Hosni Mubarak's regime was repressive, which led
in part to the revolution. Yet in the treatment of prisoners and many other ways, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi's regime is worse. Through its actions, it is clear that the U.S. still believes that Sisi's regime can provides stability to the country and the region. But this will result in more violence and extremism. For more than thirty years, it was U.S. policy to support autocratic government in Egypt as a means to regional security. The U.S. Defense Department's links with the Egyptian military have remained throughout this period. Officials are steadily restoring the flow of aid and equipment that was temporarily suspended in the wake of the coup.
Panelists discussed the following elements of a roadmap to restore democracy in Egypt:
- There is need for an inclusive national dialogue.
- Political parties have to start planning for the post-Sisi era and should focus on four points: economic prosperity, freedom, human resources, and social justice.
- For an interim transitional period before a full restoration of democracy, there will need to be an agreement on power sharing and institutional reforms.
- The U.S. should take a clear position regarding the violation of human rights in Egypt and the current military regime.
- The Egyptian community in the U.S. needs to advocate for Egypt, especially regarding human rights.
The panelists insisted that the revolution has to continue. It is the only strategy capable of ousting the government brought to power by the coup and to bring democracy back to Egypt.

