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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Explosion of strikes rocks Egyptian firms

Posted on 22/02/200703/02/2021 By 3arabawy
  • انتصار اضراب غزل كفر الدوار، فبراير ٢٠٠٧، عدسة دان موريسون
  • انتصار اضراب غزل كفر الدوار، فبراير ٢٠٠٧، عدسة دان موريسون
  • انتصار اضراب غزل كفر الدوار، فبراير ٢٠٠٧، عدسة دان موريسون
  • انتصار اضراب غزل كفر الدوار، فبراير ٢٠٠٧، عدسة دان موريسون
  • انتصار اضراب غزل كفر الدوار، فبراير ٢٠٠٧، عدسة دان موريسون

Dan Morrison reports for the San Francisco Chronicle:

Explosion of strikes rocks Egyptian firms
Thousands have walked off their jobs in a nation where such work stoppages are illegal — and many have won raises, benefits
Dan Morrison, Chronicle Foreign Service
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
Kafr el-Dawar, Egypt — Ali Ghalab sat on a dusty office couch in a pinstriped suit, explaining why his 11,700 employees joined a wave of wildcat strikes that have shocked the government and paralyzed Egypt’s textile industry.
“It’s the Muslim Brotherhood,” the factory chairman yelled, referring to the officially banned Islamist movement, “and the communists. The Muslim Brotherhood stands behind every trouble in every single factory.”
A mile away, more than 1,000 strikers had barricaded themselves inside the textile plant in Kafr el-Dawar, a gritty town on the Nile Delta about 100 miles north of Cairo. They were demanding more money and greater opportunity for promotion. A shipment of cotton fabric destined for Turkey was locked inside with the disgruntled employees.
“Ali is a shoe,” they chanted. “He is useless.”
Rattled by rising prices, falling benefits and looming privatization, tens of thousands of Egyptian workers at state-owned industries have been in rebellion. In recent weeks, more than 35,000 workers at nearly a dozen textile, cement and poultry plants have gone on strike in a nation where any strike is illegal and even the smallest public protest can be squelched with police truncheons. Train engineers, miners and even riot police also have walked off the job or held demonstrations in the past 2 1/2 months.
“It’s very unusual. There’s been nothing like this in at least five years,” said Gamal Eid, a lawyer at the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights. “It’s not just the number of strikes, it’s the number of people involved.”
The strikers are bucking the government and their own unions to secure better wages and benefits at a time when inefficient state-owned companies are being sold off or scaled down. State-owned companies employ 10 percent of Egypt’s workforce of more than 22 million.
Late last month, Investment Minister Mahmoud Mohieldin set off a minor panic when he announced that 100 state-owned companies would be sold to private owners this year. New foreign investors and cash-strapped state corporations are trying to cut back on expenses at most factories, which are in heavy debt due to mismanagement and an excess of employees, labor experts say.
For more than a generation, Egyptian factories have existed primarily to provide employment, a policy the government of President Hosni Mubarak has been pulling away from since the 1980s. In 1993, the Kafr el-Dawar plant, for example, had 28,000 workers; today it has 11,700.
Labor Minister Aisha Abdel Hadi was not available for comment for this report. But in a recent interview with the Cairo daily, Al Masry al Youm, she said Mubarak “cannot sleep at night knowing there is one unhappy worker.”
The growing tension between management and labor broke into open defiance late last year.
In December, 18,000 textile workers at Mahalla, Egypt’s largest public-sector factory north of Cairo, took to the streets over low wages and purported corruption. They won an annual bonus worth 45 days’ pay — but may strike again to demand the removal of their local union leadership, who sided with management.
“It won’t be two or three days, it’ll be an open-ended strike,” said Karim el-Beheiri, 23, a Mahalla leader. El-Beheiri said managers were retaliating by evicting retirees from company housing. “It’s a witch-hunt against our parents,” he said.
In Egypt, there are 13 industrial unions whose top leaders are appointed by the state; local-level officers are elected with the support of state security agents. Local law also does not permit labor competition — a union can’t organize workers from another sector, and there has never been a legal strike in Egyptian history, labor experts say.
“Control over the unions has always been thought of as a national security issue,” said Ragui Assaad, an Egyptian labor expert. “It’s not about wages and collective bargaining, it’s about making sure the state has control over an active, organized, movement that can make trouble.”
Labor’s victory at Mahalla set off a wave of wildcat strikes, as workers from other factories began demanding similar bonuses. Employees at Kafr el-Dawar seized their plant early this month. Six days into the strike, company Chairman Ali Ghalab said the workers were deluded if they thought they could get the same bonus as Mahalla.
“We are probably the most in debt of all the textile companies,” he said. “If I had the money, I would pay them.”
He said workers benefit from frequent promotions, inexpensive housing and a company hospital that even offers free open-heart surgery.
“They are being manipulated,” he said. “The governor himself went to see them the other day. They were so rude.”
At the factory, a small crowd of police and intelligence men listened to growing chants inside. A few striking workers laughed at management’s claims of health care and the opportunity of promotion. One said a friend had contracted hepatitis C after having a molar pulled by a company dentist.
The workers denied that the Muslim Brotherhood — whose members run as independents and comprise the largest opposition block in parliament — is linked to their strike.
“When the ruling party has a bad dream, they wake up and blame the Muslim Brothers,” said Khalid Ali, a 36-year plant veteran. “You know why we’re striking? Conditions have reached a dismal level. It’s bad for workers all over Egypt.”
Egypt’s growing economy can’t keep pace with the more than 600,000 graduates from technical colleges who enter the workforce annually. State-subsidized fuel prices rose 30 percent last year, and inflation passed 12 percent, while salaries have remained stagnant or fallen slightly, according to the Economist news magazine.
Egypt’s teachers routinely charge for after-school tutoring in exchange for passing grades, parents say.
“If you earn 500 pounds (about $87 a month), you have to pay 400 just to tutor your kid,” said Khalid Ali, citing a typical factory salary. Other men showed scars, a missing finger, a crooked shin and a gashed forearm — all the result of factory injuries.
As word that a compromise had been reached between Kafr el-Dawar workers and the Labor Ministry, cell phones rang, strikers chanted and held up their fingers in the V-for-victory sign. The government agreed to give them a cost-of-living allowance equivalent to a 45-day bonus, increased promotions and improved health care facilities among other guarantees.
As workers streamed into the factory’s concrete yard, a convoy of cars arrived carrying the local governor, Muhammad Shaarawy. A former general in the state security directorate, Shaarawy announced the deal via a weak bullhorn.
While Egypt’s security agencies typically crack down on protesters seeking political reform, they are often more tactful in their approach to labor uprisings, which can involve tens of thousands. In fact, security agents sometimes act as mediators during wildcat strikes, says Gamal Eid, the human rights lawyer.
They will do “whatever it takes to keep the pressure down,” he said.

PETITION: No to govt’s assault on opposition; No to military tribunals

Posted on 21/02/200704/02/2021 By 3arabawy

A petition against the military tribunals and the initial list of signatories:

No to Government’s Assault on the Opposition, No to Military Tribunals
We, the undersigned who belong to a diverse spectrum of parties and political tendencies, strongly condemn the regime’s decision to refer tens of Muslim Brotherhood senior members to military courts, denying them the right, as civilians, to a fair trial in front of an ordinary judge. We also express our solidarity with the liberal dissident Dr. Ayman Nour, who is denied his legal rights in prison–regardless of the political or intellectual differences that may exist between us.

We, the undersigned, see that the regime’s move to prosecute civilians in military courts and enforcing a siege on Dr. Nour, in addition to other worrying developments, as a sign that the authorities insist on maintaining their tyrannical rule, based on repressing freedoms, subverting the will of the people and besieging real opposition powers.
We are fully aware of the government’s current serious measures, as they reflect the insistence of Mubarak and his minions on making their authority everlasting, consolidating their powers and maintaining their dictatorship.
Our political responsibility obliges us, we the undersigned, to consider the attack against Al-Ghad (Tomorrow) Party and the Muslim Brothers as an attack against all of us–regardless of the political differences–and obliges us to unite ranks to confront the regime’s attack via peaceful means.

1- Ibrahim Eissa, Editor in Chief of Ad-Dostour
2- Abeya el-Banhawi, member of the Afro-Egyptian Human Rights Organization
3- Ibrahim Mansour, journalist and member of the Press Synidcate Council
4- Abul Ezz el-Hariri, Tagammu Party MP
5- Dr. Ahmad el-Ahwani, Professor of Engineering, Cairo University
6- Ahmad el-Basha, Engineer
7- Dr. Ahmad el-Mahdi, university professor
8- Ahmad Badawi Abdel Hamid, Helwan University Engineering student
9- Ahmad Bahaa Eddin Shaaban, Engineer and Kefaya member
10- Ahmad Zein, journalist
11- Ahmad Seif el-Islam Hamad, Lawyer and director of the Hisham Mubarak Law Center
12- Ahmad Taha el-Naqr, Journalist and writer
13- Ahmad Fouad Negm, Poet
14- Ahmad Mahgoub, Poet and writer
15- Ahmad Muhammad, Sales Manager
16- Ahmad Mahmoud, Teacher
17- Ahmad Mustafa, Salesman
18- Dr. Ahmad Younis, Journalist and writer
19- Osama Ahmad, Student and member of the Center for Socialist Studies
20- Osama Anwar Okasha, Scenarist
21- Asmaa Ali, Student at Faculty of Commerce, Ain Shams University
22- Ismail Suleiman, Tagammu Party Secretary in Alexandria
23- Ashraf Ayoub, Tagammu Party
24- Ashraf Hefni, Tagammu Party in North Sinai
25- Ashraf Galal, Telecommunication Engineer
26- Elham Eidarous, Translator
27- Elhami el-Merghani, Economic consultant
28- Amira Abdel Hakim, National Center Against Domestic Violence
29- Amin Youssri, Former Abassador and Political Writer
30- Dr. Amina Rashid, Academic and writer
31- Ayman Helmi, Musician and Translator
32- Ayman Ebeid, Arab Medical Association
33- Ihab Abdel Hamid, Ad-Dostour journalist
34- Bothaina Kamel, TV journalist
35- Bahaa Saber, Journalist
36- Bahaa Taher, Writer and Novelist
37- Bahei Eddin Hassan, Executive Director of the Cairo Center for Human Rights Studies
38- Tamer Wagieh, Researcher at the Center for Socialist Studies
39- Gamal Fahmi, Journalist and member of the Press Syndicate Council
40- Gamal Muhammad
41- Dr. Gamal Nassar, Writer and philosopher
42- Dr. Gouda Abdel Khaleq, Economics professor at Cairo University and Tagammu Party member
43- George Ishaq, Education expert and Kefaya member
44- Gehan Shaaban, Journalist and member of Center for Socialist Studies
45- Hazem Ghorab, Journalist
46- Hafez Abu Saeda, Executive director of the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights
47- Hossam Bahgat, Executive director of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights
48- Hossam el-Hamalawy, Journalist and member of the Center for Socialist Studies
49- Dr. Hossam Eissa, University professor
50- Dr. Hossam Abdallah, Fertility-Sterility specialist in The United Kingdom
51- Hassan Hussein, Journalist
52- Dr. Hassan Hanafi, Cairo University professor and writer
53- Hassan Abdallah, Secretary of Progressive Youth Union in North Sinai
54- Hassan Mahmoud, Director of the Muslim Brotherhood Parliamentarian block’s media center
55- Dr. Hassan Nafa’a, Professor of Political Science at Cairo University
56- Hosni Abdel Rehim, Energy engineer and writer
57- Hussein Abdel Razek, journalist and leftist writer
58- Helmi Sha’arawi, director of the Afro-Arab Research Center
59- Hamdi Hussein, labor activist
60- Hamdi Abdel Aziz, Sawasiya Center for Human Rights
61- Dr. Hamdi Abdo el-Hennawi, Development consultant
62- Hamdin Sabbahi, Member of Parliament and co-founder of Karama Party
63- Dr. Hamdi Zob’a, Doctor and writer
64- Hanin Hanafi, Researcher and member of the Center for Socialist Studies
65- Khaled el-Balshi, journalist
66- Dr. Khaled Fahmi, New York University professor
67- Khaled Youssef, Film director
68- Khalil Enani, Journalist at El-Siyassa el-Dawliya Periodical
69- Dr. Rabab el-Mahdi, University lecturer and member of the Center for Socialist Studies
70- Dr. Radwa Ashour, Ain Shams University professor and writer
71- Dr. Ra’ouf Abbas, Historian and writer
72- Dr. Reeham Mustafa, Dentist
73- Dr. Zaki Salem
74- Zeinab Abdel Hamid el-Hadari, teacher
75- Sara Muhammad, Translator
76- Sameh el-Barqi
77- Sameh Nagib, researcher with the Center for Socialist Studies
78- Dr. Sami el-Agouz, Chemist
79- Saher Gad, Journalist
80- Sai’d el-Soweirki, journalist
81- Salama Ahmad Salama, editor of Weghat Nazr magazine
82- Salma Said Abdel Fattah, Translator
83- Salwa Gaber Abdel Nabi, Accountant
84- Suleiman Youssef, Agricultural Engineer
85- Samir el-Wassimi, Journalist and political researcher
86- Samir Hosni, Theater play director
87- Samir Said Ali, Accountant
88- Dr. Samir Eleish, Civil Society activist
89- Dr. Suzan Fayyad, Doctor and director of Nadim Center for the Rehabilitation of victims of violence
90- Dr. Sayyed el-Bahrawi, University professor and writer
91- Shahinda Meqlad, peasant and socialist activist
92- Safinaz Kazem, literary critic and writer
93- Sabri el-Sammak, Cinematographer
94- Salah Adly, Director of Socialist Afaq Center
95- Sonaalaah Ibrahim, Writer and novelist
96- Dr. Diaa Rashwan, Expert with the Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies
97- Tarek Beshri, Former judge, writer and historian
98- Tarek Abdel Gawwad, Sales manager
99- Tarek Nawwara
100- Adel el-Mashad, board director o Sigma Electronics
101- Adel Suleiman
102- Dr. Aida Seif el-Dawla, Pscycology Professor at Ain Shams University
103- Dr. Abdel Gelil Mustafa, Professor of Medicine at el-Qasr el-Eini
104- Dr. Abdel Halim Qandeel, Editor of Karama newspaper
105- Dr. Abdel Hamid Ghazali, Economics professor at Cairo University
106- Abdel Rahman Moussa, Engineer
107- Dr. Abdel Ahmad Abdel Fattah, Doctor and Assistant-Secretary of Tagammu Party in Alexandria
108- Abdel Aziz el-Husseini Engineer and member of Karama Party
109- Abdel Aziz Makhyoun, Actor
110- Abdallah el-Sennawi, Editor in Chief of Al-Arabi newspaper
111- Dr. Abdel Wahab el-Messiri, Kefaya Coordinator and university professor
112- Abeer el-Askari, journalist
113- Arab Lotfy, Film Director
114- Ezzat Abdel Moneim Hilal, IT expert
115- Dr. Azza el-Khamissi, Translator and Researcher
116- Dr. Aziz Sedqi, former Prime Minister
117- Aziz Nouh, Engineer
118- Essam el-Labbad, Engineer
119- Essam Sultan, Lawyer and Wassat Party member
120- Essam Shaaban, Researcher at Socialist Afaq Center
121- Alaa el-Aswani, Novelist
122- Alaa Salem, Journalist at Al-Ahram
123- Alaa el-Kashef, Secretary of Tagammu Party in North Sinai
124- Emad Amin, Engineer
125- Emad Mubarak, lawyer and director of the Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression
126- Omar el-Maleh, Engineer
127- Omar Muhammad Ahmad el-Hadi, Journalist
128- Dr. Amr el-Shalaqani, University Professor
129- Dr. Amr el-Choubaki, Expert with Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies
130- Dr. Amr Derrag, deputy head of the Teachers’ Association at Cairo University
131- Amr Gharbeia, Blogger
132- Dr. Faten Fahim, Professor at Zagazig University
133- Dr. Fathi el-Khamissi, Musician
134- Farida el-Naqqasah, editor in chief of Al-Ahali
135- Fahmi Howeidi, Journalist and writer
136- Dr. Violet Dagher, President of the Arab Committee for Human Rights
137- Dr. Karima el-Hefnawi, Pharmacist and Karama Party member
138- Kamal Abu Eita, Tax officer and Karama Party member
139- Dr. Kamal Habib, journalist and researcher
140- Kamal Khalil, engineering consultant and director of the Center for Socialist Studies
141- Lobna Muhammad
142- Dr. Lamees el-Naqqash, university professor
143- Dr. Laila Soueif, university professor
144- Dr. Magda Adli, Doctor
145- Magda Fathi Rashwan, Lawyer and member of Justice Center for Political and Social Studies
146- Maher Makhlouf, Engineer and member of the Arab Nationalist Congress
147- Magdi Ahmad Hussein, General Secretary of Labor Party
148- Magdi Saad
149- Dr. Magdi QorQor, Engineer and member of Labor Party
150- Magdi Mahanna, Journalist and writer
151- Mahfouz Abdel Rahman, Scenarist and writer
152- Dr. Muhammad Abul Ghar, Professor of Medicine at el-Qasr el-Eini
153- Muhammad al-Ashqar, Engineer and Karama Party member
154- Dr. Muhammad el-Sayyed Said, deputy head of Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies
155- Muhammad Gamal, Administrative development expert
156- Muhammad Gamal Beshir, Journalist
157- Muhammad Rashid Fahmi, Student
158- Muhammad Seif el-Dawla, Engineer
159- Dr. Muhammad Sharaf, University Professor and Kefaya member
160- Muhammad Muhammad Abdel Wahab, Engineer
161- Muhammad Mahmoud Ibrahim, Engineer and IT consultant
162- Muhammad Mossa’ad, Advertisement agent
163- Muhammad Mounir, Journalist
164- Muhammad Hashem, Publisher
165- Muhammad Waked, Researcher and member of the Center for Socialist Studies
166- Dr. Mahmoud el-Lozy, University professor
167- Mahmoud Atta, Computer specialist
168- Mahmoud Kamal, teacher
169- Dr. Madiha Douss, French literature professor at Cairo University
170- Marwa Ghanem, news editor
171- Mustafa Singer, Tagammu Party secretary in Sheikh Zoweid, N Sinai
172- Dr. Mustafa Kamel el-Sayyed, Writer and university professor
173- Mustafa Masso’ud, engineer
174- Mamduh Habashy ,engineer
175- Dr.Mamduh Mostafa, university professor
176- Mona Ezzat, journalist
177- Dr. Manar Hussein, Lecturer at el-Qasr el-Eini and member of the Center for Socialist Studies
178- Manal Khaled, Film director
179- Monzer el-Youssef, student
180- Maha Effat, Actress
181- Maha Youssef, Lawyer
182- Dr. Nader Fergani, Writer and director of Meshkat Center for Studies
183- Nada el-Qassas, journalist
184- Nermin Khafagi, Archeologist at the Supreme Council for Antiquities
185- Nawwara Negm, Journalist
186- Nora Younis, Blogger
187- Nawla Darwish, founding member of the New Woman Society
188- Neveen Samir, Administrator
189- Hani Shukrallah, writer and journalist
190- Heba Raouf, Cairo University Professor
191- Hisham Abul Ezz el-Hariri, Member of Tagammu Party Central Committee
192- Dr. Hisham el-Salamoni, scenarist and playwright
193- Hisham Fouad, journalist and member of the Center for Socialist Studies
194- Hend Abul Ezz el-Hariri, Engineer
195- Haitham Abul Ezz el-Hariri, Engineer and member of the Tagammu Party Alexandria Secretariat
196- Dr. Haitham Manaa’, spokesperson for the Arab Organization for Human Rights
197- Wael Khalil, Engineer and member of the Center for Socialist Studies
198- Wael Abbas, Journalist and blogger
199- Wagdi Abdel Aziz, Director of the South Center for Human Rights
200- Yasmin Hani Wassfi, Accountant and secretary of the Progressive Youth Union in Alexandria
201- Dr. Yehya el-Qazzaz, University professor
202- Yehya Fekri, Engineer and member of the Center for Socialist Studies
203- Yehya el-Qallash, General secretary of the Press Syndicate
204- Yehya Megahid, Journalist at Sawt el-Umma
205- Dr. Yehya Hashem Hassan Farghal, Former head of Islamic Theology Department at Al-Azhar University
206- Youssef Chahine, Film Director
207- Alaa Seif, Blogger
208- Manal Hassan, Blogger
209- Muhammad Khaled, Blogger
210- Magda Abul Fotouh, Artist
211- Muhammad Abdel Alim, Wafd Party Member of Parliament
212- Saad Abboud, Karama Party Member of Parliament
213- Ahmad Seoudi, Student
214-Ahmad Fathallah
215- Ashraf Bahnass, Graphic Designer
216- Amani Maamoun, Secretary
217- Bassima Mohsen, Pharmacist
218- Gamal Abdel Rehim, Journalist
219- Hamza el-Helougi, Student
220- Dr. Hamza Zawba’e, Doctor and writer
221- Dr. Salem Salam, Professor of Medicine at Minya University, member of Kefaya
222- Salma Anwar
223- Somaya Ahmad, Student
224- Saber Eid, Journalist
225- Safaa Zaki Murad, Lawyer
226- Safaa Suleiman, Editor
227- Salah el-Amroussi, Writer
228- Tarek Nawwara, Manager
229- Dr. Abdel Fattah Ahmad Abdel Fattah, Doctor, Assistant-Secretary of Tagammu Party in Alexandria
230- Dr. Abdel Fattah Hassan Muhammad, Member of Parliament
231- Dr. Abdel Fattah Deyab, Manager
232- Abdallah el-Khayyat, Writer and Islamic researcher
233- Alaa Shahba
234- Omar Said Hussein, Journalist
235- Amr Zaki, Engineer
236- Louai’ Muhammad Abdel Rahman Abu Zeid, Student
237- Muhammad Ahmad, Preacher
238- Muhammad Iskandarani, Janitor
239- Muhammad Rashid Fahmi, Student
240- Muhammad Othman, Pharmacist
241- Muhammad Malek, Engineer
242- Muhammad Mohsen el-Mahdi, Customer Service Manager
243- Muhammad el-Gardawi, Poet
244- Mustafa el-Labbad, Researcher
245- Mohab el-Maghazi, Doctor
246- Nabil Muhammad  Ebeid, Worker
247- Nada Abed, Researcher
248- Yehia Abdallah, Accountant

Policeman referred to military court for refusing to guard Israeli embassy in Cairo

Posted on 20/02/200726/12/2020 By 3arabawy

Very interesting…

An Egyptian policeman has been referred to a military court because he refused to guard the Israeli embassy in Cairo.
Major general Adel Al Helali, a senior aid of the Interior Minister and Giza security manager, ordered policeman Muhammad Khalaf Hassan Ibrahim who is serving in the force guarding the Israeli embassy in Anas Bin Malek St. in Giza to appear before a military prosecution to investigate with him over the incident of a sit-in and hunger strike that he staged in protest at transferring him from Bab Sharq police station, Alexandria, to Giza security department, in the force entrusted with guarding the building of the Israeli embassy .
The policeman filed several complaints to the presidency, calling for returning him back to his work in Alexandria because he refuses to guard the headquarters of the Israeli embassy in Cairo due to the crimes Israel is committing in the Middle East , in addition being unable to afford the expenses of traveling and living away from his family .
The military prosecution jailed him for 15 days pending trial, and was sent to Um Al-Misriyeen hospital to receive treatment and artificial feeding after he insisted on maintaining the hunger strike till his demands are met .

UPDATE: Reuters also reported the story here.

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