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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: mahalla

Cry out in anger at Egypt’s show trials

Posted on 10/07/200807/02/2021 By 3arabawy

A CALL FOR SOLIDARITY:

The US-backed regime of Hosni Mubarak is prosecuting 49 Egyptians in the Emergency High State Security Criminal Court. It is accusing them of involvement in the recent two day uprising in the Nile Delta town of Mahalla.
Egyptian security forces occupied Ghazl el-Mahalla, the biggest textile mill in the Middle East with 27,000 workers, on the 6 and 7 April.
They were attempting to crush a strike in protest against skyrocketing food prices. The workers also demanded a raise in the national minimum wage, which has remained stagnant since 1984.
The strike was organized by the Textile Workers’ League, an independent labor association formed last year following a wave of successful textile workers’ occupations.
The association called the strike on 6 April. The regime responded by flooding the Nile Delta town with thousands of troops. They surrounded the textile factory compound.
This move triggered a mass demonstration that drew in workers and the urban poor.
Protesters fought back when security forces attacked demonstrators with batons, tear gas, water cannons, rubber bullets and live ammunition.
Crackdown
At least three people were killed and hundreds injured. Police then swooped on neighborhoods and arrested hundreds of Mahalla citizens, including key strike activists.
Many of these activists were released following international pressure, but 43 ordinary people swept up in the crackdown are still in jail.
Detainees who were released shortly afterwards spoke of horrific torture meted out to them in police stations and state security facilities.
These included severe beatings, electric shocks and sexual abuse. Prisoners were forced to sleep on the floor and threatened with rape. On several occasions security forces personnel trampled over the detainees as they lay helpless on the ground.
The detainees have found themselves trapped in a maze of laws and prisons.
State security agents have ignored orders from the prosecutor’s office to release some of the prisoners.
Others who had made it out of the detention facilities were either kidnapped or rearrested under wide-ranging security powers.
Mubarak’s regime has decided to transfer 43 of the detainees to an exceptional court – which has been denounced by human rights groups as lacking the international standards for a “safe and just trial”.
Six others are on the run and will be tried in absentia.
All the detainees will be tried on trumped up charges and face prison sentences of between six to ten years hard labor.
Egyptian activists have denounced the regime for using the detainees as scapegoats for the uprising. The trial is expected to begin in August.
International solidarity with the Mahalla detainees is urgently needed. Statements of support from trade unions and human rights groups will help put pressure on the Egyptian dictatorship.
To get copies of the petition contact the Stop the War Coalition. Phone 020 7278 6694 or go to » www.stopwar.org.uk
For more information about the solidarity campaign email cairoconference@stopwar.org.uk
Send letters of protests to the Egyptian Embassy, 26 South Street, London W1K 1DW

The petition has already been signed by hundreds of activists and trade unionists who took part in Marxism 2008, including:

Trevor Ngwane, Anti-Privatisation Forum (South Africa)
Mark Serwotka, General Secretary of Public and Commercial Services Union (UK)
Jane Loftus, vice-president Communications Workers Union (UK)
Eamonn McCann, journalist and anti-war campaigner (Ireland)
Alex Callinicos, Academic and SWP leading activist

Please circulate the petition.

Three Mahalla detainees released from Borg El-Arab prison

Posted on 05/07/200828/03/2015 By 3arabawy

Sarah Carr reports…

Three detainees held since April in connection with clashes which occurred between demonstrators and security forces in Mahalla, have been released.
Defense lawyer Ahmad Ezzat of the Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression told Daily News Egypt that Muhammad Salah Marei, Mostafa Bedeir El-Sayyed and Rageb Gaber El-Mahdy, who were being held in administrative detention in Alexandria’s Borg El-Arab Prison were transferred to a police station in Tanta Friday, ahead of their release.
At time of press, he anticipated that they would be released later on Friday.
“I don’t know the reason why they were suddenly released today. There’s usually no logic involved in these decisions,” Ezzat told Daily News Egypt.
On April 6 and 7, 2008 violent clashes broke out between demonstrators protesting against increasing food prices and security forces. Hundreds of people were detained in the Delta town over the course of the two days.
Muhammad Maree was translating for American photojournalist James Buck on the evening of April 10 outside the Mahalla police station, where a large crowd of detainees’ relatives were protesting the detention of their family members.
While the unconditional release of both men was ordered by the public prosecution office later that night, they were re-apprehended and again detained in the Mahalla police station without charge.
Buck was subsequently released the next day, while Marei was taken to an unknown location before being sent to Borg El-Arab Prison where he remained in detention for nearly three months.

Marxism 2008

Posted on 04/07/200807/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Marxism 2008 opened yesterday. I was honored to share platform with leading IST comrades from Britain, Zimbabwe and Ireland.

Marxism 2008 Opening Rally إفتتاح المؤتمر

The first event in the conference saw Comrade Simon giving a great presentation on Palestine and the central role to be played by the Egyptian working class in smashing the Zionist state.

Comrade Simon Assaf

I’m overwhelmed by the interest in Mahalla by virtually everyone I meet. The town is mentioned in literally every conversation I have with any one, and in any public talk about the ME.

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