Corruption of Arab Leaders: Causes of "Arab Spring" - Current Affairs CSS 2015 Solved Paper
Corruption of Arab Leaders: Causes of "Arab Spring" - Current Affairs CSS 2015 Solved Paper
Corruption of Arab Leaders: Causes of "Arab Spring" - Current Affairs CSS 2015 Solved Paper
Question: What are the causes of “Arab Spring”? Identify their impacts on the
future politics of the region.
Introduction
At the end of 2010 and the beginning of the 2011, a series of demonstrations and protests began to rise in
the Arab world. These protests have become known as the “Arab Spring”, or, as someone else called it, the
“Arab awakening”. The Tunisian revolution that took place in the self-immolation of Mohamad Bouazizi on
18 December 2010 in protest of police corruption and ill treatment, has shaken authoritarian leaders
across the Arab world in areas such as Egypt, Libya, Yemen, Bahrain. In this article we will try to answer
the following question: why did the Arabs rebel? The Arab world was living a very difficult economic and
social situation as in Europe in 1848. Poverty, rising food prices, inflation, human rights violation, and high
unemployment were the main phenomena the Arabs were facing.
of the world food prices, and that definitely had influences on destabilization of Egyptian sociopolitical
system (Korotayev et al: 011).
3. Unemployment
Unemployment in the Arab region is also a major source of economic insecurity and for destabilization of
any political system. According to Don Tapscott, “twenty-four percent of young people in the region cannot
find jobs” (Guardian: 2011). This percentage of young unemployment is very high and the Arab countries
in the region have not been able to change this situation and create new jobs, especially after the world
financial crises.
On a systemic level, the Arab awakening is creating a new socio-political and economic reality in the
region, transforming the balance of power, not because some states have become stronger, but rather
because other states have become weaker and more fragile.
Even if many other authoritarian rulers managed to cling on, they can no longer take the acquiescence of
the masses for granted. The governments across the region have been forced into reform, aware that
corruption, incompetence and police brutality will no longer be unchallenged.
The result is a very colourful but also fragmented and fluid political landscape, ranging from far-left
organizations to liberals and hard-line Islamists. The voters in emerging democracies, such as Egypt,
Tunisia and Libya, are often confused when faced with a plethora of choices. The Arab Spring’s “children”
are still developing firm political allegiances, and it will take time before mature political parties take root.
Conclusion
The Middle East before the Arab uprisings seemed like a heterogeneous security system. These
parameters were inherited from the colonial powers and the Cold War. The Arab revolutions untied the
internal dynamics of protest and political change in most of the states of the region, affecting the whole
political order.