Skip to content
3arabawy
3arabawy

Hossam el-Hamalawy

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

Hossam el-Hamalawy

Category: Blog

Ill and hungry, Palestinians in Egypt long for home

Posted on 25/07/200720/01/2021 By 3arabawy

From the Daily News Egypt:

The thousands of Palestinians stranded in Al-Arish and Rafah are broke, hungry, and homeless, but you won’t hear a single one asking for these basic necessities.
“We just want to go home,” is the anthem among these Palestinians, young and old, poor and less poor.
“We don’t want their food,” shouts one woman, “we won’t eat or drink, just get us back.” “The Palestinian people don’t get hungry,” she adds.
She stays in one of the better types of accommodation — at an outdoor community center where tents were pitched up — along with about 70 others.
When asked for her name she responds, “My name is Palestine!”
She has been in the camp for over a month and a half and says she has developed diabetes during her forced stay in Egypt.
Everybody here knows the exact number of days they have been away without thought or hesitation. One child even responds “since Wednesday,” by which he means Wednesday nearly two months ago.
Nine-year-old Maged and his younger sister have been in Egypt with their father for 46 days, returning from pilgrimage in Mecca, while their mom waits for them back in Gaza. He is visibly tired and reticent, uneager to discuss his thoughts and feelings on their situation.
Other children are more willing to talk but all have the same thing to say: they miss their siblings and families and only know they are here because the border has been closed.

Egypt workers demand raises and rights

Posted on 25/07/200729/03/2015 By 3arabawy

From the BBC…

Hidden away in a concrete loading bay around the side of a major Cairo postal office, about 100 workers in their 20s and 30s gather among a forest of placards.
Following a trail blazed by a succession of Egyptian textile workers, concrete makers, train drivers and others in recent months, they say they will stay put until their demands are met.
In a country where political opposition is heavily stifled and largely left to a small intellectual elite, the current series of strikes, sit-ins and protests is an unusually broad-based protest among a population normally associated with political indifference.
Joel Beinin, head of Middle East Studies at the American University in Cairo, says proponents of democratic reform in Egypt should be “more excited” by the wave of labor unrest than they were by the emergence of anti-government street protests by the opposition Kifaya (Enough) group in 2005.
Underlying most of the strikes are demands for wage rises in an economy where it is not unusual even for professionals to hold down two jobs to feed their families.
But some strikes have taken on a political edge as workers protest against privatisations under President Hosni Mubarak’s sweeping economic reform programme.
And a few workers have begun calling for something Egypt has not had for decades – independent trade unions.
Strikes spread
Mohammad Attar is a textile worker in the Nile Delta town of Mahalla, and was an organizer in one of most successful strikes.
Some 20,000 workers downed tools and occupied their factory last December, inspiring a series of copycat strikes as their demands for an unpaid bonus promised to all laborers nationally were eventually met.
The father of three is in jubilant mood as we speak on the phone.
Recent threats to strike further have just earned him and his co-workers a raise – boosting his monthly salary of 320 Egyptian pounds (US$56) by 50 Egyptian pounds (US$9), with 7% annual increases promised.
He says his activities have resulted in several summonses from the security forces.
But, for the first time, he says he is not afraid: “I stand in front of them and we are equal. In fact we are even better than them – we are in the production sector but they are just in the service sector. We are the backbone of the national economy.”
Within four months of the Mahalla strike, workers at three other large textile factories and two cement factories had held stoppages and railway employees had briefly blockaded the Cairo-Alexandria train line backed by a go-slow by Cairo metro drivers.
And the sit-in by the postal workers, who are calling for fixed term contracts, is one among hundreds of other smaller-scale actions by workers ranging from rubbish collectors to bakers and poultry workers to Suez Canal employees which have also been reported in the Egyptian media.

MB military tribunal

Posted on 24/07/200723/12/2020 By 3arabawy

Photos by Amr Abdallah.

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 1,490
  • 1,491
  • 1,492
  • …
  • 1,775
  • Next

Search 3arabawy

Follow 3arabawy

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