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Showing posts with label Indonesia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indonesia. Show all posts

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Countries That Are Predominantly Muslim And Democratic



Countries that are predominantly Muslim and function as modern democracies, though the strength and quality of democracy vary. Here are a few prominent examples:


1. Indonesia

  • Population: ~87% Muslim (largest Muslim population in the world)

  • Democracy: Yes – Indonesia is a functioning multiparty democracy.

  • Government Structure: Presidential system with regular elections, vibrant civil society, and a free press (though some limitations exist).

  • Challenges: Issues with corruption, religious intolerance, and regional autonomy tensions.


2. Tunisia

  • Population: ~99% Muslim

  • Democracy: Yes – since the 2011 Arab Spring, Tunisia has made significant democratic strides.

  • Government Structure: Semi-presidential system with elections and a new progressive constitution (2014).

  • Challenges: Political instability in recent years, especially post-2021 with executive power consolidation.


3. Senegal

  • Population: ~95% Muslim

  • Democracy: Yes – long-standing democracy with peaceful transitions of power.

  • Government Structure: Presidential republic.

  • Strengths: Vibrant political culture, strong civil liberties compared to many neighbors.

  • Challenges: Some concerns over press freedom and opposition rights in recent years.


4. Malaysia

  • Population: ~60% Muslim (Malay majority)

  • Democracy: Yes – parliamentary democracy with a constitutional monarchy.

  • Strengths: Regular elections, coalition politics, judicial review.

  • Challenges: Ethnic and religious preferential policies, media restrictions, and recent political instability.


Summary:

While no country is a "perfect" democracy (including Western ones), Indonesia, Tunisia, Senegal, and Malaysia are credible examples of predominantly Muslim countries that practice modern democratic governance. Others like Turkey have democratic institutions but face significant backsliding in recent years.


Indonesia Democracy | Hallmark Research Initiative


Here's a comparative overview of four predominantly Muslim countries—Indonesia, Tunisia, Senegal, and Malaysia—evaluated based on three key democratic indicators: political rights, press freedom, and electoral integrity. These assessments draw from reputable sources such as Freedom House, Reporters Without Borders (RSF), and the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU).


๐Ÿ—ณ️ Comparative Democracy Indicators (2024–2025)

Country Freedom House Score (2024) Press Freedom Rank (2025) EIU Democracy Index (2024)
Senegal 68/100 – Partly Free 74/180 6.13 – Flawed Democracy
Indonesia 56/100 – Partly Free 111/180 6.71 – Flawed Democracy
Malaysia 53/100 – Partly Free 107/180 7.16 – Flawed Democracy
Tunisia 44/100 – Partly Free 121/180 4.04 – Hybrid Regime

๐ŸŒ Country Highlights

๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ณ Senegal

  • Democratic Strengths: Noted for peaceful power transitions and robust civic engagement. In 2024, citizens successfully opposed an attempt by the incumbent president to delay elections, leading to a democratic change in leadership.

  • Press Freedom: Ranked 74th globally, indicating relatively strong media independence. 

๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฉ Indonesia

  • Democratic Strengths: The world's largest Muslim-majority democracy with regular elections and active civil society participation.

  • Press Freedom: Ranked 111th, reflecting challenges such as incidents of violence against journalists. 

๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡พ Malaysia

  • Democratic Strengths: Operates under a constitutional monarchy with a parliamentary system. Recent elections have seen increased political competition.

  • Press Freedom: Ranked 107th, showing moderate media freedom with some government influence.

๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ณ Tunisia

  • Democratic Challenges: Once hailed as a success story post-Arab Spring, Tunisia has faced democratic backsliding, with increased executive power and suppression of opposition.

  • Press Freedom: Ranked 121st, indicating significant restrictions on media operations.


๐Ÿ“Š Summary

Country Political Rights Press Freedom Electoral Integrity
Senegal Moderate Strong Strong
Indonesia Moderate Moderate Moderate
Malaysia Moderate Moderate Moderate
Tunisia Weak Weak Weak

✅ Conclusion

Among these nations, Senegal currently exemplifies the most robust democratic practices, with active citizen participation and relatively free media. Indonesia and Malaysia maintain functional democracies with areas for improvement, particularly in press freedom. Tunisia, however, has experienced notable democratic erosion in recent years.




Sunday, July 31, 2022

Sanctions On Russia

The Russia sanctions bite Sanctions have been effective at crippling the Russian economy. That's the conclusion of a new 118-page paper from Yale's Jeffrey Sonnenfeld and 18 c0-authors. ....... "Russian imports have largely collapsed," the paper says — creating massive supply shortages and denying the country crucial parts and technologies. ....... "Russian domestic production has come to a complete standstill." ....... Foreign companies that have left Russia account for 40% of Russian GDP, the author wrote, almost none of which is going to come back any time soon. ......... "Looking ahead, there is no path out of economic oblivion for Russia as long as the allied countries remain unified in maintaining and increasing sanctions pressure." ....... Russia needs Europe to buy its natural gas more than Europe needs Russian natural gas to buy. ........ Because natural gas is "a highly non-fungible commodity," delivered through pipes that take decades to build, Russia has very few alternative export markets for its gas, and 83% of its natural gas exports go to Europe. ...... The economic repercussions of Russia's war of aggression in Ukraine are being felt in all countries. But they're particularly devastating in Russia — with little, if any, future upside so long as sanctions remain in place.

Tuesday, January 05, 2016

Global Politics Is Perhaps Star Wars

In the Star Wars movies, you see these various life forms. There are numerous groups. They look different, they weight different, they sound different, they organize different. These are fundamentally different groups. Maybe that is what global politics is. We perhaps live on a Star Wars planet.

Yesterday I felt like the bottom fell out. What is this? What's going on? Let me go read the Shia Sunni entries on the Wikipedia. They likely have been massively vandalized. All is fair in war, I guess. I guess not all terrorists are alike. Not that I am calling anyone a terrorist.

The drone attacks prove my theory. I have always felt Americans take the Star Wars movies way too seriously.