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Lebanon Beyond Sectarianism

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  • Lebanon Beyond Sectarianism

    LEBANON BEYOND SECTARIANISM
    Chris Phillips

    guardian.co.uk
    Friday 24 April 2009 10.00 BST

    As the battle lines are drawn for the Lebanese elections in June,
    reports suggest the surprising kingmakers could be Lebanon's
    Armenians. This small community of barely 150,000 look set to abandon
    its traditional neutrality and back the Hezbollah-led opposition. While
    this appears to be yet another example of the complex interconfessional
    horse trading that has characterised Lebanese politics for years,
    it could be a sign that the state is finally taking slow steps away
    from its long-standing sectarianism.

    Although the Taif accord of 1989, which ended the Lebanese civil war,
    stated that "abolishing political sectarianism is a fundamental
    national objective", a confessional electoral system remains in
    place. Parliamentary seats are assigned by religious group and
    parties are defined by sect rather than political agenda. In the
    years of Syrian domination after the war (1991-2005), Damascus saw
    the benefit of reviving this system which allowed them to divide
    and rule. Even after the Syrian withdrawal, it stayed enshrined in
    the constitution. The recent decision to enact Taif's other demand
    of removing religion from ID cards two decades later than expected
    cannot disguise the slow progress that has been made.

    Ostensibly, the cedar revolution of 2005, which expelled the Syrians
    and created the current political landscape, also divided along
    religious lines.

    The Sunni, Druze and Christian communities supported the
    anti-Syrian 14 March coalition, while the pro-Syrian 8 March group
    was largely Shia. Yet recent developments have challenged these
    alignments. Firstly, the memorandum of understanding in early 2006 saw
    the Christian Free Patriotic Movement form an unlikely alliance with
    Hezbollah. With the FPM claiming they had won 70% of Christian support
    in the 2005 elections, this ensured that 8 March could no longer be
    seen as a purely Shia bloc. Now, the decision of Armenians, such as
    the Tashnag party, to join them in the coming elections is further
    bolstering 8 March's non-sectarian credentials, producing an opposition
    that is seemingly united by its politics rather than confession.

    A key reason for this drift into non-religious blocs is the question
    over Syrian influence after their withdrawal in 2005, which presents
    Lebanese voters with a political rather than a sectarian issue around
    which to align.

    While the Maronite Christian and now Armenian communities appear
    more equally split between the two camps than other groups, there
    are also minority Shia parties in the government and Sunni and Druze
    representatives in the opposition. Moreover, issues unrelated to
    Syria are emerging to define the camps' agendas; 8 March presents
    itself as anti-corruption, while 14 March claims to be the defender
    of economic stability. Could these political platforms eventually
    come to outstrip creed in setting the civic agenda?

    Sectarianism won't be washed away in one election though, and powerful
    forces support its continuation. Christian, Druze and Sunni political
    dynasties that have created parties to continue a regional dominance
    of their tribe and sect stretching back generations do not want to
    alter a system that has historically given them power. Similarly,
    external actors promote divisions. Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt have
    tried to whip up hostility in recent years by presenting Hezbollah as
    part of a wider Iranian-led Shia threat to Sunnis in the region, while
    Iran and Syria have made little effort to dispel such accusations.

    Despite pursuing a non-sectarian agenda, even the opposition can be
    seen as endorsing the status quo. Many see the FPM's alliance with
    Hezbollah as merely an expedient way for its leader, Michael Aoun,
    to find political space as the only major Christian figure in the
    opposition, rather than carving out a permanent political alliance. His
    importance to 8 March is that he brings parliamentary seats that can
    only be allocated to Christians.

    In a non-religious electoral system, he would have no role to play.

    Similarly, the Tashnag party's conversion could be viewed as an
    assessment that Armenian interests would best be served under 8 March,
    rather than a genuine belief in abandoning a structure that guarantees
    this minority's political representation.

    Lebanon's confessional constitution damages its democratic credibility
    and leaves the door open for a return to religious violence in the
    future. Only last year sectarian militias took to the streets of Beirut
    and Tripoli , showing that conflict isn't far from the surface. This
    is exacerbated by outside powers exaggerating the Sunni-Shia divide to
    pursue their own regional goals. Twenty years on from the civil war,
    political power remains in the hands of the same elites and ruling
    families, with a few new additions, who oversaw the outbreak of
    hostilities in the first place. Hopes that the younger generation who
    dominated the cedar revolution might produce new leaders to break this
    oligarchy soon dwindled as the cause was hijacked by the traditional
    parties and their political heirs.

    Yet even if their motives are more cynical, the emergence of two
    political rather than religious blocs in Lebanon should still be
    encouraged. It might be unlikely that these fragile coalitions will
    be able to wean Lebanon off confessionalism in the current regional
    climate. However, the more they evolve policy agendas that transcend
    traditional divisions, the more likely the Taif goal of "abolishing
    political sectarianism" will prove possible when, and if, regional
    circumstances allow.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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