First Published: 2012-07-11

 

Post-Arab Spring: Muslim nations still ‘prefer’ democracy

 

Survey shows majority in some Muslim countries favors laws based on Koran except Lebanon.

 

Middle East Online

A democracy built on the teachings of Koran

WASHINGTON - Democracy is still popular in six Muslim-majority countries, over a year after the Arab Spring, and the majority in some countries favors laws based on the Koran, according to a poll published Tuesday.

The first two Muslim-majority nations to overthrow a dictator still "desire" democracy, with some 67 percent of Egyptians and 63 percent of Tunisians saying "democracy is preferable," according to the survey conducted by the Pew Research Center in recent months.

In the rest of the region, 84 percent of Lebanese and 71 percent of Turks say "democracy is preferable," but Jordanians and Pakistanis are less enthusiastic, at 61 and 42 percent respectively.

Forty-five percent of Tunisians say the country has improved without ousted 23-year president Zine el Abidine Ben Ali, and 42 percent disagree. Tunisians are still optimistic about the future of their country, with 75 percent saying the nation's flailing economy will improve.

Aside from Lebanon, which boasts a large Christian minority, a majority of poll participants across the surveyed Muslim nations feel Islam does and should play a central role in government. Points of view differ across the countries regarding the degree to which Islam should affect policy.

In Pakistan, 82 percent of participants feel "laws should strictly follow the teachings of the Koran." In the rest of the Muslim world, only 72 percent of Jordanians, 60 percent of Egyptians, 23 percent of Tunisians and 17 percent of Turks and Lebanese agreed.

A majority of poll participants believe women should have the same rights as men. Lebanese led the pack with 93 percent believing in gender equality. Only 74 percent of Tunisians and 58 percent of Egyptians support equal rights for women. Some 67 percent of Tunisian women say that equal gender rights are very important, whereas only 50 percent of men agree.

The overwhelming majority of most poll participants opposed extremists, even if Al-Qaeda is seen as favorable by 19 percent of Egyptians, 16 percent of Tunisians and 13 percent of Pakistanis.

The polls were conducted in March and April, with a sample of 1,000 participants per country and a margin of error ranging from more or less than 3.9 to 5.2 points across the different countries.


 

Khamenei’s tailored election: Rafsanjani and Mashaie barred from presidential race

Bouteflika’s heath condition: Another Algerian state secret?

Egypt gears up for possible rescue operation with large security sweep

Qusayr battle reveals widening scope of proxy war in Syria

Dubai successfully foils smuggling of 259 African ivory tusks

‘Crucifixion’ of Yemenis in Jizan: Everything old is new again in Saudi Arabia

UAE court readies verdict in secret organization case

Saudi nabs 10 more Iran spy suspects

Syrian attack on Israeli patrol: Accounts contrast

Tunisia radical Islamists engage in trial of strength with Ennahda

Deadly SARS-like virus reaches Tunisia

Blood of Iraqi Ambassador sanctioned in Jordan

Massive tornado: Obama declares major disaster in Oklahoma

US rings alarm bell over rising tide of religious intolerance

First sea turtle nest spotted at Saadiyat Beach

Iran wants to take part in Syria peace conference

IMF predicts Saudi economic slowdown

US criticises Egypt's civil rights record

Battle for Qusayr: Hezbollah sends new elite fighters

Kerry visits Oman for mega defense deal, Mideast talks

Bouteflika’s absence paralyses Algeria politics

Iran’s Guardians Council hints Rafsanjani not fit for presidency

Mauritania's ruling party: Abdel Aziz will not step down

Israel ‘fabricates’ its innocence from murder of Mohammed al-Dura

Maliki’s remedy for Iraq sectarian violence: Overhaul of security strategy

Qatar emir laments international failure over Syria

Egypt sends reinforcements to Sinai as speculation grows

Spokesman’s surrender to Mauritania deals another blow to Ansar Dine

Another ‘Bou Azizi’ in Saudi Arabia: Street vendor dies after self-immolation

Rising storm of violence hits Iraq hard in May

Bahrain court slaps nine Shiites with jail terms over 'terrorist' cell

Abu Iyadh to Tunisia rulers: Thank you tyrants, but we will never be defeated!

US drone strikes again in Yemen

15 killed in string of bomb attacks in Iraq

Battle for Qusayr: 23 Hezbollah fighters killed

Militants set their sights on mosques in Iraq

One dead in police clashes with Islamists in Tunis

UAE calls for political action to stop 'repressive Damascus’

Egypt's Morsi rejects negotiations with Sinai kidnappers

Tough measures against expatriates raise concerns in Kuwait

Maliki chooses ‘cosmetic solution’ for Iraq sectarian wounds

Clashes in Tunisia as Ansar al-Sharia clings to escalation

Strategic city of Qusayr falls into hands of Assad forces

Internet enters ‘coma’ ahead of Iran presidential election

Saudi Arabia vies to dissuade its nationals from joining ‘jihad’ in Syria