Opinion :
US funded ouster of Egypt’s democratic President Morsi
by Daya Gamage
US President Barack Obama recently stated the United States was not
taking sides as Egypt's crisis came to a head with the military
overthrow of the democratically elected president.
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Pro-Morsi supporters on
the rampage |
His top diplomat, secretary of state John Kerry in an interview to
Pakistani media on Thursday during his visit there gave a twist to the
military takeover as “restoration of democracy.”
A review of dozens of US federal government documents shows
Washington has quietly funded senior Egyptian opposition figures who
called for toppling of the country's now-deposed president Mohamed
Morsi.
Documents obtained by the Investigative Reporting Program at UC
Berkeley show the US channelled funding through a State Department
program to promote democracy in the Middle East region. This program
vigorously supported activists and politicians who have fomented unrest
in Egypt, after autocratic president Hosni Mubarak was ousted in a
popular uprising in February 2011.
The State Department's program, dubbed by US officials as a
“democracy assistance” initiative, is part of a wider Obama
administration effort to try to stop the retreat of pro-Washington
secularists, and to win back influence in Arab Spring countries that saw
the rise of Islamists, who largely oppose US interests in the Middle
East.
Activists bankrolled by the program include an exiled Egyptian police
officer who plotted the violent overthrow of the Morsi government, an
anti-Islamist politician who advocated closing mosques and dragging
preachers out by force, as well as a coterie of opposition politicians
who pushed for the ouster of the country's first democratically elected
leader, government documents show, according to the Investigative
Reporting Program at UC Berkeley.
Information obtained under the Freedom of Information Act,
interviews, and public records reveal Washington's “democracy
assistance” may have violated Egyptian law, which prohibits foreign
political funding.
It may also have broken US government regulations that ban the use of
taxpayers’ money to fund foreign politicians, or finance subversive
activities that target democratically elected governments.
‘Bureau for Democracy’
Washington's democracy assistance program for the Middle East is
filtered through a pyramid of agencies within the State Department.
Hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars is channelled through the
Bureau for Democracy, Human Rights and Labour (DRL), The Middle East
Partnership Initiative (MEPI), USAID, as well as the Washington-based,
quasi-governmental organisation the National Endowment for Democracy
(NED).
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Mohamed Morsi |
In turn, those groups re-route money to other organisations such as
the International Republican Institute, the National Democratic
Institute (NDI), and Freedom House, among others. The U.S. Federal
documents show these groups have sent funds to certain organisations in
Egypt, mostly run by senior members of anti-Morsi political parties who
double as NGO activists.
The Middle East Partnership Initiative - launched by the Bush
administration in 2002 in a bid to influence politics in the Middle East
in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks - has spent close to
$900m on democracy projects across the region, a federal grants database
shows.
USAID manages about $1.4bn annually in the Middle East, with nearly
$390m designated for democracy promotion, according to the
Washington-based Project on Middle East Democracy (POMED).
The US government doesn't issue figures on democracy spending per
country, but Stephen McInerney, POMED's executive director, estimated
that Washington spent some $65m in 2011 and $25m in 2012. He said he
expects a similar amount paid out this year.
A main conduit for channelling the State Department's democracy funds
to Egypt has been the National Endowment for Democracy. Federal
documents show NED, which in 2011 was authorised an annual budget of
$118m by Congress, funneled at least $120,000 over several years to an
exiled Egyptian police officer who has for years incited violence in his
native country.
This appears to be in direct contradiction to its Congressional
mandate, which clearly states NED is to engage only in “peaceful”
political change overseas.
Exiled policeman
Colonel Omar Afifi Soliman - who served in Egypt's elite
investigative police unit, notorious for human rights abuses - began
receiving NED funds in 2008 for at least four years.
During that time he and his followers targeted Mubarak's government,
and Soliman later followed the same tactics against the military rulers
who briefly replaced him.
Most recently Soliman set his sights on Morsi's government.
Soliman, who has refugee status in the US, was sentenced in absentia
last year for five years imprisonment by a Cairo court for his role in
inciting violence in 2011 against the embassies of Israel and Saudi
Arabia, two US allies.
He also used social media to encourage violent attacks against
Egyptian officials, according to court documents and a review of his
social media posts.
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Opponents of President Morsi protest
outside the presidential palace in Cairo |
US Internal Revenue Service documents reveal that NED paid tens of
thousands of dollars to Soliman through an organisation he created
called Hukuk Al-Nas (People's Rights), based in Falls Church, Virginia.
Federal forms show he is the only employee.
After he was awarded a 2008 human rights fellowship at NED and moved
to the US, Soliman received a second $50,000 NED grant in 2009 for Hukuk
Al-Nas. In 2010, he received $60,000 and another $10,000 in 2011.
In an interview with the Investigative Reporting Program at UC
Berkeley, Soliman reluctantly admitted he received US government funding
from the National Endowment for Democracy, but complained it wasn't
enough. “It is like $2,000 or $2,500 a month,” he said. “Do you think
this is too much? Obama wants to give us peanuts. We will not accept
that.”
‘Pro bono advice’
NED's website says Soliman spreads only nonviolent literature, and
his group was set up to provide “immediate, pro bono legal advice
through a telephone hotline, instant messaging, and other social
networking tools”.
However, in Egyptian media interviews, social media posts and YouTube
videos, Soliman encouraged the violent overthrow of Egypt's government,
then led by the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party.
“Incapacitate them by smashing their knee bones first,” he instructed
followers on Facebook in late June, as Morsi's opponents prepared
massive street rallies against the government. Egypt's US-funded and
trained military later used those demonstrations to justify its coup on
July 3.
“Make a road bump with a broken palm tree to stop the buses going
into Cairo, and drench the road around it with gas and diesel. When the
bus slows down for the bump, set it all ablaze so it will burn down with
all the passengers inside … God bless,” Soliman's post read.
In late May he instructed, “Behead those who control power, water and
gas utilities.”
Soliman removed several older social media posts after authorities in
Egypt took notice of his subversive instructions, court documents show.
More recent Facebook instructions to his 83,000 followers range from
guidelines on spraying roads with a mix of auto oil and gas - “20 litres
of oil to 4 litres of gas - to how to thwart cars giving chase.
On a YouTube video, Soliman took credit for a failed attempt in
December to storm the Egyptian presidential palace with handguns and
Molotov cocktails to oust Morsi.
“We know he gets support from some groups in the US, but we do not
know he is getting support from the US government. This would be news to
us,” said an Egyptian embassy official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media.
Funding other Morsi opponents
Other beneficiaries of US government funding are also opponents of
the now-deposed president, some who had called for Morsi's removal by
force.
The Salvation Front main opposition bloc, of which some members
received US funding, has backed street protest campaigns that turned
violent against the elected government, in contradiction of many of the
State Department's own guidelines.
A long-time grantee of the National Endowment for Democracy and other
US democracy groups is a 34-year old Egyptian woman, Esraa Abdel-Fatah,
who sprang to notoriety during the country's pitched battle over the new
constitution in December 2012.
She exhorted activists to lay siege to mosques and drag from pulpits
all Muslim preachers and religious figures who supported the country's
the proposed constitution, just before it went to a public referendum.
The act of besieging mosques has continued ever since, and several
people have died in clashes defending them.
The U.S. Federal records show Abdel-Fatah's NGO, the Egyptian
Democratic Academy, received support from NED, MEPI and NDI, among other
State Department-funded groups “assisting democracy”. Records show NED
gave her organisation a one-year $75,000 grant in 2011.
Abdel-Fatah is politically active, crisscrossing Egypt to rally
support for her Al-Dostor Party, which is led by former UN nuclear chief
Mohamed El-Baradei, the most prominent figure in the Salvation Front.
She lent full support to the military takeover, and urged the West
not call it a “coup”. “June 30 will be the last day of Morsi's term,”
she told the press a few weeks before the coup took place.
Courtesy: Asian Tribune
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