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Democracy Is Coming to the Middle East--Slowly


Article # : 17230 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 2 / 1990  2,450 Words
Author : Michael Sterner
Michael Sterner is a partner of the IRC Group, a Washington- based international consulting firm. He was the U.S. ambassador to the United Arab Emirates and a deputy assistant secretary of state from 1977 to 1981.

       The events taking place in Eastern Europe are so momentous that they have pushed even the crisis-torn Middle East off the front pages. But recent elections in Jordan - the first free general elections to be held in that country in 22 years - remind us that, in a more gradual less dramatic way, the same impulses toward political liberalization and economic reform are making their appearance in the Middle East and North Africa.
       
        Progress in the region has not been universal, and where it has occurred it can only be measured over a time frame of several years. Of the 22 Arab states in the region, the governments of four - Algeria, Egypt, Tunisia, and Jordan - have made clear commitments to political and economic reform. Gut elsewhere - in Syria, Iraq and Libya, for example - there has been no appreciable loosening of the autocratic grip. And among the traditional monarchies and principalities of the Arabian Peninsula, there has been, if anything, retrograde movement from the 1970s, when parliaments with limited powers were instituted in Kuwait and Bahrain, only to be dissolved when they proved to be too obstreperous for the ruling houses.
       
        In allowing general elections for a new parliament last November, Jordan's King Hussein made a far-reaching decision to broaden the political base of his regime and set his country on the road to democratization. This does not mean that a full-fledged democracy has been established overnight: Even the new parliament will have limited powers, and under the constitution the king retains much leverage through his power to dissolve parliament, call new elections, or govern by decree under emergency laws (as he has for much of the past two ... (1932 of 14591 Characters)
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