Skip to content
3arabawy
3arabawy

Hossam el-Hamalawy

  • Home
  • About
  • Archive
  • Blog
  • Photos
  • Books
3arabawy

Hossam el-Hamalawy

Year: 2007

Women and the current labor strikes

Posted on 08/05/200707/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Those who are interested in the empowerment of women should follow closely what is happening with the current wave of labor strikes. Women are playing a central role in the industrial action, especially in the textile sector. And as noted by Ghazl el-Mahalla December strike leaders, the militancy of the female workers outweighed that of their male colleagues.

I recently met Mohsen el-Sha’er in Giza, a trade unionist from the Mansoura-España Garments Company, whose workers have been staging an open-ended sit-in since April 19. Mohsen–who’s been working for 12 years, receiving a monthly salary of LE180 (US$32)–says the participation of women in the sit-in is central.

Mansoura-España Garments Company Trade Unionist Mohsen el-Sha'er النقابي بشركة "المنصورة أسبانيا" للملابس محسن الشاعر

The Mansoura-España Company is in the Nile Delta province of Daqahliya. Around 284 workers are currently occupying their factory since 19 April, protesting its liquidation by the United Bank which controls most of its shares. The workers are demanding their unpaid social bonuses and May Day grants, as well as a 10-month salary compensation for every year they worked. (The owners are only offering two months.) This is the third industrial action they take since last September.

“Women comprise 75% of the total labor force in the company,” said Mohsen. “They were all with us in the strikes, and are taking part in the sit-in.”

I asked him whether this caused any sensitivities in a conservative province like Daqahliya, with the women leaving their family homes to sleep at the factory.

“Not at all,” he replied quickly. “We are all one family. Some of the women are married to colleagues in the company, so you’ll find the couples taking part together in the sit-in. As for those who are singles, or their husbands do not work at the company, their families are supportive too. The men know if their wives do not win, they will all end up in the street. The families bring food, which is shared communally among us.”

4th Annual WCCTUR Conference: Workers and Social Resistance

Posted on 08/05/200715/01/2021 By 3arabawy

The Workers’ Coordinating Committee for Trade Union Rights (WCCTUR) is to hold its fourth annual conference, titled “Workers and Social Resistance,” this Friday 11 May at the Cairo Press Syndicate.

Friday Conference Timetable:
10am to 10:30am: Registration
10:30am to 10:45am: Opening note, by Saud Omar of the WCCTUR
10:45am to 12:45pm: First session
“The Attack on the Right to Health Insurance”
The session will be chaired by Dr. Abdel Galil Mustafa, and coordinated by Muhammad Abdel Salam. The speakers will include: Dr. Ra’ouf Hamed and Dr. Shoukri Azer
12:45pm to 1:45pm: Break
1:45pm to 3:30pm: The Second Session:
“Labor Protests: Indications and Results”
The session will be chaired by Magdi Helmi, and coordinated by Ad-Doustour labor correspondent Mustafa Bassiouny. Speakers will include labor lawyer Khaled Ali. Workers who took part in the recent wave of strikes will also give their testimonies.
3:30pm to 4:30pm: Lunch
4:30pm to 6pm: The Third Session:
“The Right to Fair Wage”
The session will be chaired by Dr. Ibrahim el-‘Eissawi, and coordinated by Elhami el-Merghani. Speakers will include Ahmad el-Naggar.
6pm: Recommendations
The organizers will draft the recommendations of the conference into a statement… followed by honoring the Center for Trade Union and Workers’ Services, and labor leaders Ahmad Khedr and Abdel Moneim Karawya.

Moneim and MB detainees to start hunger-strike tomorrow

Posted on 07/05/200703/03/2021 By 3arabawy

Blogojournalist Abdel Moneim Mahmoud, and the 18 detained MB students are to start an open-ended hunger-strike tomorrow Tuesday, if the Prosecutor extends their detention, after being subject to humiliating treatment in Mahkoum Tora Prison.

In a statement sent out of prison, the detainees complained from:

1-Confinement for 23 hours a day in overcrowded cells where an average of 22 inmates are kept in 10×22 feet cells infested with bugs with only one extremely filthy bathroom to share.
2-Numerous assaults by criminal prisoners and thugs, including sexual harassment and verbal abuse.
3-Use of illegal drugs inside prison cells by criminals and drug dealers, and the produced smoke which makes it very difficult to even breath an already polluted air, in addition to extremely foul language and screaming all night by intoxicated thugs which became a source of psychological agony.
4-Poor medical care in handling life threatening and contagious medical conditions, including skin diseases and HIV. Four cases of chicken pox and measles were denied appropriate care and hospital admission.
The statement also complained that the students who were mostly preparing for their final exams, surrendered their school books to the prison administration in protest, since it became impossible for them to study in such awful environment.

Moneim is to be interrogated by the Prosecutor tomorrow, at the Tagammu el-Khames Prosecution’s Office, Nasr City. Please express your solidarity by showing up tomorrow 10am in front of the office.

If you can’t show up, it’d be still great to at least write one follow up posting on his case, and circulate information among your contacts and friends, inside Egypt and abroad, about the abuses against Moneim and the Egyptian political detainees languishing in Mubarak’s gulag.

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 227
  • 228
  • 229
  • …
  • 361
  • Next

Search 3arabawy

Follow 3arabawy

  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • Bluesky
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Spotify
©2026 3arabawy