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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: doctors

Young doctors to protest tomorrow over work conditions

Posted on 09/08/200910/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Via Al-Masry Al-Youm English Edition:

Young doctors will stage a protest tomorrow in front of the Doctors Syndicate’s headquarters demanding better salaries for fresh graduates.
Initiated by the “Young Doctors of Egypt” group on Facebook, which currently includes over 700 members, tomorrow’s two-hour demonstration is the first protest organized by that group.
Young Egyptian doctors suffer from very low incomes ranging between LE 150 and LE250 a month, which barely cover the costs of transportation to the hospitals in which they work. They equally suffer from bureaucratic complications with regards to the pursuance of their studies and professional trainings.
“We address our protest to the Ministry of Health and demand salaries ranging from LE 1,000 to LE 2,000,” explains Mohammed Shafiq, a young doctor who disseminated the demonstration online. Fresh graduates demand raising their basic salary to 1000 LE, to reach a minimal level of 2000 LE with the addition of all bonuses and allowances. They also asked for raising various allowances such as the contagion allowance, as well as transportation, post-graduate studies and other allowances.
“We are also concerned about elevating the quality of the scientific education we receive,” adds Shafiq, who hopes that at least 10 percent of the group members on Facebook will show up at noon tomorrow in front of the Doctors’ Syndicate. In their statement of demands, young doctors requested continuing education inside hospitals through visits by established medics, participation in international conferences, scholarships and fellowship programs. They also requested facilitating the admission procedures for post-graduates studies, which are instrumental to medics’ professional path. Further to post-graduate studies, they demanded fixing a ceiling for admission fees at LE600, a sum that has currently jumped to LE3650.
“We are willing to join forces with other doctors’ organizations for common demands later on,” says Shafiq.
Tomorrow’s protest has been discussed at the board of the Doctors’ Syndicate earlier this week and has garnered at least “verbal” support from its senior members, including some of the Muslim Brotherhood activists within the syndicate.
“It is an opportunity for those young doctors to protest,” says Essam el-Aryan, member of both the Brotherhood and the Doctors’ Syndicate Board, adding that any kind of demonstration in support of doctors is appreciated. But it remains unclear how many doctors belonging to the Brotherhood will actually protest on the stairs of the syndicate alongside their young colleagues. In March 2008, Brotherhood members were accused by secular doctors’ advocacy groups of aborting a planned national strike. The Brothers’ involvement in the syndicate politics, they charged, were only limited to “rhetoric” and regional issues like Palestine solidarity campaigns, refraining from active participation in the fight over work conditions.
Some of us will be present tomorrow, but others have meetings outside,” adds el-Aryan who himself says he has a meeting tomorrow at the time of the protest. “If the demonstration is still on when I come back to the syndicate I will attend it,” he concludes.
The head of the syndicate, Hamdi el-Sayyed, was not available for comment.

Industrial action updates

Posted on 16/07/200910/02/2021 By 3arabawy

The Tanta Flax and Oil strikers tried today to re-take the building of their trade union, which was confiscated by the management around a year ago, but were prevented by the police. The building, I’m told, is roughly 15 minutes away from the company compound. The workers and the management ended up in the police station filing charges against one another. The prosecution is expected to look into the cases on Saturday.

In other developments, thousands of miners in the Upper Egyptian province of El-Minya have cut the freeway, demonstrating against the Governor.

UPDATE: Here is a report by Reuters:

Thousands of quarry workers clash with Egypt police
CAIRO, July 16 (Reuters) – Several people were injured after thousands of quarry workers and owners clashed with police in Egypt on Thursday in the central province of al-Minya, security sources and witnesses said.
The protesters marched into al-Minya city and blocked a bridge spanning the Nile and connecting the east and west of the city, in protest against a decision by the authorities to impose new duties on quarried rock, security sources said.
Police used teargas to disperse the crowd, but the protesters stoned police.
Reports of the number injured varied. One security source said at least eight riot police had been wounded, and 17 protesters were suffering the effects of teargas inhalation.
The website of the independent daily al-Masry al-Youm said the government had imposed duties of 40 Egyptian pounds ($7.17) per tonne of quarried stone, leading some quarries to shut down and lay off their laborers.
Protesters said they had resorted to the demonstration because petitions to various officials had been ignored and some quarries had been shut for more than two weeks, according to the website.
Labour unrest has become common in Egypt, usually over pay, and often in privatised companies. Even professional groups such as doctors, pharmacists and lawyers have stopped work or threatened strikes over pay.

UPDATE: A Central Security Forces soldier has died from injuries sustained in the clashes with the miners, Al-Masry Al-Youm reports.

مصرع جندي أمن مركزي في اشتباكات مع عمال المحاجر في المنيا #egyworkers

— المصري اليوم (@AlMasryAlYoum) July 16, 2009

UPDATE: Police source tells Reuters 48 protesters were detained.

Egypt workers fight for pay, (and) against the state

Posted on 15/07/200910/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Reuters published a report, where I’m interviewed, on the labor movement, titled “Egypt workers fight for pay, not against the state”:

Striking Egyptian workers are unlikely to escalate demands for better conditions into a political challenge to the government, but stoppages will make state assets less attractive to investors.
Worker frustration with rising prices and shortages of subsidised bread flared into two days of clashes with security forces in this pot-holed city north of Cairo in April last year.
The tough security response and the government’s offer to hike some wages highlighted official concerns about an escalation of discontent in a country where a fifth of the 77 million people live on less than $1 a day.
More than a year later strikes continue unabated, but political opposition groups seeking to capitalise on worker grievances have failed to broaden action into a wider protest against the rule of Hosni Mubarak, president since 1981.
“Not a single political party has the power, even the Muslim Brotherhood … (to) stop or push the strike wave forward,” labor activist Hossam el-Hamalawy said.
He said the Brotherhood, Egypt’s biggest opposition group, had limited organized support among workers and political activists using the internet had failed to rally workers.
“Workers aren’t just going to wake up and go on the internet and read that some Facebook activist called for a general strike and obey that, it doesn’t work that way,” Hamalawy said.
Mostly leftist and liberal activists agitated for a general strike in solidarity with Mahalla el-Kubra workers. Most workers ignored the calls and the Brotherhood did not take part.
LABOUR UNREST
“Each (political group) is trying to influence people for their ideology,” said Gehad Taman, a labor organizer at a textile mill in Mahalla el-Kubra, adding that efforts by political activists had mainly undermined worker claims.
Years of authoritarian rule have weakened opposition groups and, analysts say, added to apathy among many Egyptians.
But labor unrest has become common. Even professional groups like doctors, pharmacists and lawyers have stopped work or threatened strikes over pay.
Factory workers have been at the forefront as a cabinet of reform-minded ministers, appointed in 2004, revived a programme of sell offs, stoking worries about job security and pensions.
The action has often been organized outside official trade federations which many workers see as allied to the ruling National Democratic Party, which dominates Egyptian politics.
No big state firms have been sold since a bid to offload Banque du Caire failed to receive high enough bids in June last year. But once the world economic climate improves any new sales may find investors more wary as long as strikes continue.
“Labour unrest feeds into a certain amount of caution in foreign investors,” said EFG-Hermes economist Simon Kitchen.
“The unrest is a symptom of over-staffing and poor management and that is what perhaps would deter the foreign investor,” he added.
Egypt has sought to draw investment based on its location between Europe and Asia, and by offering lower labor costs.
“Our labor code allows these strikes to happen,” Investment Minister Mahmoud Mohieldin said, but added demands were modest.
SLIDING DEMAND
Speaking to reporters this month, he said strikes mostly hit state or recently privatised companies and blamed a surge in commodity prices, which has now eased, for the 2008 unrest.
Inflation peaked at 23.6 percent in August last year, but has tumbled to around 10 percent amid a world downturn.
Firms are trying to convince workers that, amid sliding demand for exports, now is not the time for industrial action.
“Strikes are not acceptable under the current circumstances,” Khaled Mahfouz, a spokesman for Mahalla el-Kubra’s Misr Spinning and Weaving, told Reuters. “Our sales have suffered in this crisis as we deal with world exports.”
The average annual salary for workers at Misr Spinning and Weaving, the largest textile manufacturer in Africa and the Middle East, was 15,000 Egyptian pounds ($2,682) in 2007-08, versus 8,500 pounds in 2002-03, Mahfouz said.
The call for worker restraint was echoed by the president in a speech to mark this year’s May Day labor holiday.
“If employers accept some losses or a fall in profits, then laborers have to cooperate with them in these difficult times in a manner that preserves their establishments and preserves the opportunities for honest work they offer,” Mubarak said.
But he also urged business leaders to avoid ostentatious displays of wealth, a nod to concerns often cited by Egypt’s struggling workers and the poor that economic reform may have generated growth but the benefits have not trickled down.

While my quotes mentioned above were correct, I agree with Per that the conclusions I’d draw would have been different. Workers are refraining from the the existing “political parties,” but that doesn’t mean their fight is not “political” or is not a direct “political” challenge to the state. On the contrary I see the strikes to be increasingly getting politicized–A politicization, that is not necessarily manifested in the conventional political manner: parliamentary voting behavior, membership in political parties, or adopting the Kefaya agenda, etc.

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