From: Hossam el-Hamalawy, Managing Editor of the Al-Masry Al-Youm English Edition
To: Sherif Wadoud, vice CEO, Al-Masry Al-Youm
Cc: Salah Diab, CEO, Al-Masry Al-Youm
Subject: Resignation Letter
Date: 31 May, 2010
After serving for a year as a member of the founding editorial team of the Al-Masry Al-Youm English Edition, kindly accept my resignation included in this letter.
– I’m disappointed by the continuous managerial interventions in the editorial process, which go into minute details so as to what video should go along with what article, which words to hyperlink, what photos to use–all issues that should be left for the judgment of the professional editorial team hired by the Al-Masry.
– There is even no clear mechanism for those interventions. The project owner, Ms Kismet ElSayed, has repeatedly contacted editors and journalists with instructions without notifying the editor in chief. On another occasion, the management went ahead and censored an article1 on torture of detainees, on 5 April, without notifying the managing editors on duty. Upon protest from the editors, the article was sent to the Al-Masry’s legal office for review. We never heard back from them as of time of writing.
– The managerial interventions do not always stem from a qualified position and disregard the expertise of the editorial team. For example, the team was asked by the project owner to “copy and paste from Al-Jazeera’s website,” as one way to increase the rate of updates on our Al-Masry portal. The request was refused by the editors for obvious professional reasons, only to hear the project owner insisting Al-Jazeera was a “news wire service, similar to AP and Reuters [sic]”
– Over all there is lack of clarity regarding the benchmarks according to which the team should be assessed. Those keep changing, sometimes even on a weekly basis by the management.
– We are still in a state of disbelief re the management’s failure to instate a clear position for the English Edition within the Al-Masry institution which regulates its relationship vis a vis the Arabic newspaper, whose editor, Magdi el-Gallad, repeatedly directed insults publicly against members of our team, expelled them from meetings, and literally sabotaged our work for months by stalling the publishing of articles written by EE journalists. An apology was requested by the team for those insults and unprofessional attitude–an apology that never came and left everyone wondering whether that was a sign the management was sanctioning el-Gallad’s behavior.
– The management has failed to secure the publicity and marketing needed for the English Edition. Not a single ad in the newspaper was published, despite the repeated requests by the EE editors. Our requests for information from the management about the number of subscribers to our services, like SMS and the ODP, were not answered, leaving us uninformed about the target audience and our benchmarks for success.
– The office working conditions are depressive in terms of light, ventilation, and equipment. Our repeated requests to the Human Resources department, for example, about the needed computers and chairs rarely meet response. How are we supposed to encourage our journalists to work from the office, rather from home, if the office is by no means suitable?
– I am deeply frustrated by the unclear system of attendance the Human Resources department is adopting, which has left me uncompensated for the weekends during which I worked, and the long working hours from home following office hours, which sometimes went on till 5 AM.
– The money owed to contributors is always problematic to process with the finance department, leaving some freelance contributors unpaid since last year. This is negatively affecting both our team’s work and reputation.
I do not think it’s become feasible to continue working under those conditions. I’m hereby handing over my responsibilities to management, wishing the remaining team members all the luck.
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1 https://www.almasryalyoum.com/en/news/diaries-torture