Sisi’s continuous coup in Egypt

Egypt's Abdul Fatah el Sisi is preparing the ground to demolish constitutional term limits, and he will probably get away with it.

Getty Images

Egypt’s counter-revolution was almost perfect in that it appeared like a malicious doppelganger of the revolution itself. Tahrir’s occupation became the symbol of January 25 – of democracy and egalitarianism in the face of Egypt’s ruling kleptocracy – so the counter-revolutionaries co-opted and subverted this symbol.

They turned the iconic square into a space for all those forces who wanted to dismantle democracy and reverse all the concrete gains of January 25. 

From the day of Sisi’s seizure of power, he couldn’t simply announce that things were going to get worse than they ever were under Mubarak, no matter how many Egyptians believed in the absurdly murderous propaganda against the Muslim Brotherhood and the Morsi government. 

Vague talk about ‘reforms’ and ‘human rights’ and other tidbits of the language of January 25 thus coincided with his vicious authoritarian policies, policies crafted to ensure January 25 could never happen again. 

In this sense, instead of talking about July 3, 2013 as ‘the coup’, we should consider the current political dynamic in Egypt to be a continuous coup. 

The ‘promises’ of his seizure of power were only made to be broken. Those who resisted his presidency were subject to murder, arrest, imprisonment or torture.

The ‘elections’, whether presidential or for the fake parliament, are absurd ceremonies wherein the only people allowed to run are essentially Sisi’s own supporters. Dissenters, even within the milieu of Egypt’s powerful elites, are subject to violence. 

Now perhaps the last pillar of what might be called Sisi’s ‘revolutionary pretensions’ (his pretensions towards being something better than Mubarak), namely the term limits on his presidency, are being prepped for demolition.

Almost every Egyptian critic of Sisi saw this on the horizon. The presidential limits were set for two terms of four years in Article 140 of the constitution of 2014, which was drafted under Sisi’s rule.

The same constitution which was sold to the Egyptian public as representing a ‘New Egypt’ of ‘Peace, Prosperity and Growth’ and which had provisions against torture and human rights abuses – all of this drafted by a regime that is one of the most prolific and efficient torturers and human rights abuser on earth. 

So the idea that the President Field Marshall would let his power be curtailed by time was never very likely. 

There is a time honoured tradition among Egyptian tyrants of justifying tyranny and the forsaking of responsibility by manufacturing faux popular outpourings of support.  Nasser was good at this, such as the moment after the humiliation of the Six-Day War in 1967 when the allegedly broken president resigned, only for hundreds of thousands of Egyptians to come out to demand that he remained as the leader. Of course, almost all of those in the streets were either members of Nasser’s Socialist Union or stooges paid by the Nasser regime to protest in the president’s favour.  

Sisi isn’t so good at it. Hence the constant use of violence. 

But he tries his best. His presidency, a responsibility that the great saviour apparently didn’t want (as is the official narrative), was initiated first by a bunch of groups with names like Masr Balady (Egypt My Country) and Kammel Gemilak (Finish Your Favour) claimed to have collected 26 million signatures of ‘normal Egyptians from all walks of life’ to demand that Sisi run for president. 

While there’s no doubt Sisi at that point had genuine popularity, it was an entire charade planned from the very beginning by Sisi and the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.

It should have been no surprise then when in August of last year, a petition emerged, allegedly spontaneously, from Egyptians calling for 140 to be amended to allow Sisi to remain as president beyond his two terms.  

Now it seems like there will be a definitive endeavour by Sisi to essentially erase article 140. According to the Egyptian media outlet Mada Masr, sources speaking on condition of anonymity from Egypt’s General Intelligence Service (GIS), parliament and the presidential office, have confirmed that these amendments will be rolled out by June of this year and will, among other disturbing things, extend his presidency for an as yet unknown period of time.

It seems that the GIS and, in particular, Sisi’s son Mahmoud, who is a senior officer with the GIS, is the main force pushing the amendments around different Egyptian state institutions and ruling forces. In addition to this, Sisi loyalists in parliament, headed up by Hizb el-Wafd MP and Sisi advisor Bahaa Eddin Abu Shaqqa, have been quietly pressuring the same committee who drafted the constitution to get rid of Article 140.  

Many people might wonder why if Sisi—a tyrant with absolute control—doesn’t just declare himself dictator for life, but tyrannies rarely function like that. Even within a state such as Egypt’s that verges on the totalitarian, there are internal logics that govern the tyrannical system.

Certain liberal critics might imagine that SIsi’s will to get rid of Article of 140 is some kind of subversion of an emerging democracy - but it’s more a case of a power play within the fairly diverse ruling forces of the state. 

In other words, should Sisi fail in abolishing his term limits, it’s highly unlikely a true reformist would replace him, but they can’t take the chance of even a superficial reformist having state power. 

This is precisely why Sisi clamped down on other authoritarian and elite candidates running against him in the staged election of 2018. Within different cliques of Egypt’s ruling elite, there exists a spectrum of different opinion – some, including the likes of Ahmed Shafik, while hardly progressive, understand that Egypt cannot continue down the disastrous path that Sisi is leading it. 

These personalities cannot be controlled and thus might rock what Sisi and his backers consider to be a fairly steady boat. Egypt’s elites know that, to a certain extent, their tyrannical methods are simply securing only their own interests, while much of the country remains ungovernable by those methods.

What happens if Sisi were to disappear after the end of his term and someone came in who actually wanted to address even just a fraction of the huge problems –  entirely caused by the ruling kleptocracy – facing Egypt?

Getting rid of Article 140 is their insurance policy. But it’s not the only one.

According to the same report, even if he fails to amend article 140, there is another plan to create a ‘High Council for the Protection of the Constitution’, which would effectively annul the above scenario of any kind of reformist being able to function as Egypt’s president in the wake of Sisi.

The council would have unprecedented powers to ‘safeguard national security’, which in Egypt is newspeak for ‘safeguard the interests of the ruling elites’.  

The head of this unelected council for life would be Abdel Fattah El Sisi.

Outside of Egypt, the regime is seeking to capitalise on the rise of global authoritarianism and anti-immigrant sentiment in the West, with Sisi anxious to get it done while his staunch ally Trump remains in office. 

The EU, mired in obsessive and industrial xenophobia against refugees, will provide no obstacles to anything Sisi does, as it continues to provide unconditional support for his regime in the face of the so-called ‘refugee crisis’.  

The regime is beyond confident that Sisi will get his own way.  

One way or another, for at the very least the next decade, Egypt’s Pharaoh is going nowhere. 

Route 6