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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Anti-price hikes protest

Posted on 09/05/200831/12/2020 By 3arabawy

Protesters condemn price hikes, demand minimum wage, reports Sarah Carr.

Student to PM Nazif: Release Egypt!

Posted on 23/04/200831/12/2020 By 3arabawy

From the Daily News Egypt:

“Mr. President, Mr. President, Egypt’s youth are behind bars.” With those words Belal Diab, a 20-year-old literature student at Cairo University, interrupted Prime Minister Ahmad Nazif as he addressed the student body on campus Monday, kicking up a media storm.
“We want you to release those detained on April 6. Mr. President those are the people you were talking about who use the internet, those are the people who stood up and defended you when you were criticized at the World Economic Forum for saying Egypt is globalizing. Mr. President I want to tell you one thing, Education is zay el fol [perfect] the university is zay el fol, there is bread, there is democracy and freedom, release Egypt Mr. President, release Egypt Mr. President!” he said as students clapped passionately.
“I was provoked [by Nazif’s speech],” Diab told Daily News Egypt. “How can he talk about information technology, the internet and how the youth has to use it to express their opinions and get their voices out there when those who did exactly that are now all behind bars,” he said, referring to students who created the Facebook group promoting the April 6 strike.
“I admit that I was out of order but I had to get my voice out there, officials have to start listening to us instead of detaining us,” he said.
When Diab had completed his outburst, Nazif had turned to him and said, “I feel sarcasm and pain in your words, but I’m telling you Egypt is alright and you have to look at everything with objectivity because there are many challenges facing this country.”
“There objective reason for detaining these people is the acts of destruction they committed and there is a thin line between expressing your opinion and encouraging destruction, striking and rioting. Many want such chaos in this country but we won’t let this happen. Egypt is not a chaotic country,” continued the Prime Minister.
Diab, however, insists that he wasn’t wasn’t being sarcastic. “I was speaking passionately and my tone was serious. As for the sarcasm he was talking about who is really being sarcastic in this country, is his cabinet … those telling people that everything is fine and were are progressing,” he said.
The incident led to an abrupt halt of the lecture. Neither the Minister of Higher Education, Hany Helal, nor the President of Cairo University, Ali Abdel Rahman, gave their scheduled speeches.
As soon as Diab had ended his impassioned speech, two security guards sat behind him, but when the lecture was over and they tried to grab him they were prevented from doing so by the crowd, which saluted him for having “the guts” to speak openly.
But soon enough, the same security guards, accompanied this time by a police officer and a university professor, caught up with him. The professor asked for Diab’s university ID. It was then that the guards took hold of him in front of the crowd and escorted him to the office of the head of the university’s security.
“They did that in public to set an example to all students that this is what happens if you object or express your opinion,” said Diab.
When Diab’s friends saw what had taken place, they and others who had witnessed the event exchanged text messages on their mobile phones and congregated around the security office and successfuly demanded his release.

The incident was captured on a mobile phone:

Here’s a report from Al-Masry Al-Youm. Bilal is a Ghad Party activist, and a member of Haqqi, a united front spearheaded by the Socialist Students in Cairo and Helwan that campaigns against the rising tuition fees and the deteriorating quality of higher education.

Free Kareem.. Free Kamal.. Free Mahalla..

Posted on 22/04/200805/02/2021 By 3arabawy

This was among the first set of photos I snapped of Kareem el-Beheiri, the currently “disappeared” Ghazl el-Mahalla activist. It was a Workers’ Coordination Committee meeting in downtown Cairo, which took place on a Friday, one day after the victory of the Kafr el-Dawar textile strike. I recall I was totally exhausted that Friday, after my return on the previous night from Kafr el-Dawar and then stayed up late till I posted a report. I wanted to go home early on that day, but I had already volunteered to translate for three Swedish journalists who showed up at the event. Also I wanted to hear any of the participants in Ghazl el-Mahalla December 2006 strike. And it was Kareem that day who spoke very eloquently about the strike and the future of the struggle against the state-backed labor unions.

Kareem el-Beheiri, 23-year-old Ghazl el-Mahalla labor activist

The photo below, which unfortunately not that focused and in low resolution, is the first I snapped of Kamal el-Fayoumi, the currently “disappeared” Textile Workers’ League activist. It was January 2007, and Kamal was among a delegation of the Ghazl el-Mahalla December 2006 strike leaders who descended on Cairo to meet with the (state-backed) General Union of Textile Workers officials in Shobra demanding the impeachment of the corrupt local union members who opposed the strike. He was the most fiery among the strike leaders, I recall. In response to Said el-Gohary scoffing the workers’ demands saying they had no right to ask for any since Ghazl el-Mahalla was losing and not generating profits anymore, Kamal stood up and with a high-pitched voice he thundered, while waiving his hands and pointing at the corrupt union officials, “I’m a worker! You give me a production plan every year, and I implement it. It’s not my business what I produced later gets marketed or not! This is the management’s responsibility not mine!” I remember I told myself, “Wow! This guy destroyed the neoliberal logic in four sentences, and I bet he never read either Chomsky or Klein.”

Ghazl el-Mahalla Textile Worker Kamal el-Fayoumi slamming his union officials

I hope to see Kareem, Kamal, all the political detainees free soon. My heart and thoughts go out to them and their families.

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