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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Category: Blog

Cairo farmers fight army for land

Posted on 13/11/200730/12/2020 By 3arabawy

From AFP:

Bayonets fixed, the soldiers scrambled onto the island in the middle of Cairo, rolled out barbed wire and set up camp. The reasons why they did so are as murky as the Nile waters that flow around them.
Al-Qursaya island is home to 5,000 people, mostly farmers who have lived there for generations. It is one of the last undeveloped pieces of land in the mega-city’s ever-expanding concrete sprawl.
The army’s arrival in September heralded that of mechanical diggers swaying atop barges as they set about expanding the island, which can only currently be accessed by a small ferry.
More ominously, the farmers have been told to stop paying rent as the land “will be cleared,” according to the only official document any of the residents has seen.
Officials have spoken vaguely about transforming the area into a public park, but no one on Al-Qursaya believes them.
They fear that their homes and livelihood will be taken from them to make way for yet another tourist development dreamed up by wealthy men who straddle the worlds of business and politics.
And in Egypt, no explanation is needed when the all-powerful military is involved.
Sociologist Sameh Nagib says the army is increasingly involved in development projects and that “for tourism, for roads, there is always a struggle for the land.”
“The army is a major landowner in Egypt. If there’s a problem with a road project the army gets involved — they say the army owns it,” says the American University professor, who is based in Cairo.
But beyond so-called projects of national interest such as roads, Nagib says that the government, pushing a programme of liberal economic reforms, “wants foreign investors.”
“Because the value of real estate has tripled in recent years, because of all this the army’s involvement is accelerating,” he says.
One analyst who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue said that President Hosni Mubarak’s son, Gamal — a former merchant banker widely seen as being groomed to be the next president — could be currying favor with the army.
One question mark over Gamal’s inheritance is that he would be the first president from a non-military background, and “this could be Gamal’s way of winning the army over. Maybe he’s giving them a bigger cut with the businessmen,” the analyst says.

Canadian Trade Unions denounce crackdown on Egyptian labor activists

Posted on 13/11/200728/12/2020 By 3arabawy

The Canadian Labour Congress, which represents 3.2 million workers sent a letter to Hosni Mubarak, denouncing the crackdown on labor activist Kamal Abbas and his Center for Trade Unions and Workers’ Rights.

Tax officers strike updates: Govt response rejected; Strike coninues; Open-ended sit-in begins Tuesday

Posted on 12/11/200730/12/2020 By 3arabawy

The 55,000-strong Tax officers’ strike continues. The “Higher Strike Committee” of trade unionists who are running the strike issued a statement, which I translated into English:

The Higher Strike Committee Real Estate Taxes
Important Announcement
Dear Colleagues, the representative of the Finance Minister has interrupted the ultimatum we gave him to respond to our demands (21 November, 2007), only to notify us that the Finance Minister has rejected all our financial requests presented to him, saying response to these demands is to be regulated by the implementation of the new Real Estate Taxes Law. The latter is oppressive, and has been trying to see the light for years with no success.
Therefore,
We have decided to terminate the ultimatum, and go out on a sit-in in the heart of Cairo, until our demands are met:
1- Receiving equal treatment to our colleagues in the Cairo Real Estate Tax Authorities
2-Impeaching Ismail Abdel Rassoul, the head of the Real Estate Taxes Authorities

We declare that we are continuing with our strike, and call up on our colleagues, men and women, to take part in the open-ended sit-in in downtown Cairo, Tuesday 13/11/2007, at 12 noon, at the Egyptian General Federation for Trade Unions building in Galaa Street, so as to take our rights in a legitimate and peaceful means–by a striking and sitting in.

We will be victorious…
The Higher Strike Committee

Notice: For those colleagues in the distant provinces who cannot attend the Cairo sit-in, continue your strike and stay on the ground, and call: 0100678654 or 0126592540

More background about the struggle of Egypt’s civil servants could be found in this new article by Mustafa Bassiouny in the Lebanese Arabic Daily Al-Akhbar.

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