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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: mahalla

النصر قادم.. يسقط الدكتاتور الفاسد مبارك

Posted on 21/04/200825/10/2025 By 3arabawy

Labor Updates

Posted on 21/04/200807/02/2021 By 3arabawy

The Egyptian Workers and Trade Unions Watch issued a report on the sit-in staged by the textile workers of Wabariyat Sammanoud, who occupied their factory from 13 to 19 April, demanding raising their food allowance from LE43 to LE90 similar to that decreed to Ghazl el-Mahalla by the govt, as well as receiving the 15 day bonus that Nazif announced for the textile sector following the abortion of the Ghazl el-Mahalla 6th of April Strike. The Sammanoud occupation ended in victory.

But one thing to note about the factory is that out of its 1,300 labor force, there are 750 female workers according the EWTUW. They had a leading role in the protests, and were joined by their children in the factory, where they slept at night on the tiles covered with cardboards in horrible conditions. Still they held out. The resilience of the women workers in the ongoing industrial actions is just impressive.

I received also some updates on the Mansoura España Garments Company, from Francesca, an AUC grad student researching Egyptian labor and gender:

On Sunday April 20, the 250 workers of Mansoura-España received the news that the firm had been sold by the majority shareholder United Bank to Parliament Member and business man Yousry Faris (Al Masri al Yawm) or Yousry El-Moghazy (Al Dustour). The MP is also the owner of the Delta Academy, which flanks the Mansoura-España grounds, as well as factories in 6 October and Port Said. According to Amal, a worker at the factory who participated in the workers’ 2-month sit-in almost exactly a year ago, the MP announced that he would not be responsible for honoring the agreements reached between the bank, the firm, and the local factory union that had brought that action to a close. He reportedly offered the workers employment at his other factories, an impossible prospect for workers who are mostly based in Talkha, Mansoura, and neighboring villages.
Last year’s agreement delivered increased wages and partial payment of the yearly bonus payments that had been owed to the workers since 1996. However, workers say they have still not been compensated in full. More than these unfulfilled promises, it is the sale of the company and the prospect of losing their jobs that has again brought the Mansoura-España workers to the stage of collective action. Al Masri al Yawm reports that they have threatened to sustain the sit-in until their demands are answered, but their prospects as a medium-sized private sector firm do not appear strong. Amal reports that for the workers (the majority of which are women) another action involving the overnight occupation of the factory will be socially difficult.
Last year’s sit in garnered much media attention for the strong efforts of the female workers who slept in the factory to sustain the sit-in. Many of these women faced serious chastisement or punishment from their family members, who disapprove of women being absent from their household responsibilities and/or for spending the night with their male co-workers. It was the fact that these women participated at this level that made last year’s strike feasible – many of the male workers at the company work additional jobs (because the Mansoura-España wages are particularly low) and would leave the sit-in to go to them.
Amal says that negotiations between the new owner and the factory union (which has close interpersonal relationships with the factory management) will take place in the next two weeks. Note that this threatened strike action takes place concurrently with strikes at private Delta textile companies Sigad Damanhour and Wobreyat Samanoud, but with very different stated goals — workers at Damanhour and Samanoud are claiming the grants and bonuses promised by PM Nazif to the workers of Ghazl al-Mahalla two weeks ago.

I called up a contact in the factory. He said they went on a strike for two days on the 19th and 20th. The strike was disbanded on afternoon of the 20th after an agreement was reached between the strikers on the one hand, and the Labor Ministry officials, a State Security officer by the name Baher, Officers from the Talkha Police Station and a representative from the United Bank whose first name is Nader on the other, by which the United Bank was given 15 days to pay the rest of bonuses and May Day grants. The worker also expressed concerns over new that Moghazi is stepping in to buy the company, since he is one of the shareholders in the neighboring Delta Academy (which is primarily owned by Muhammad Rabi’e, who wants to acquire the factory land, demolish it, to expand the academy campus. The workers in the factory are not kept in the loop about the managements plans. The sale of their factory is not confirmed officially up till now, according to the worker I spoke with, but “it looks like it’s coming. That will be a different story. We have to get our unpaid rights first, completely, all of them, and then see what we’ll do with the future of the company.”

In other news, Sarah Carr reports on a dentists’ protest that was foiled by Mubarak’s pigs.

Updates on the detainees: Sharqawi released; Mahalla labor activists ‘disappear’

Posted on 21/04/200805/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Blogger Muhammad el-Sharqawi has been released around noon today.

I couldn’t get thru to him or his fiancé Naira, but I spoke with Amr Gharbeia and Malek Moustafa few mins ago, and they both confirmed it. According to them, Sharqawi was not abused in custody this time, but his health is in a poor state since he had been on a hunger strike since Thursday. He spent the night in Qasr el-Nil Police Station and was then taken to the Qasr el-Nil Prosecutor’s Office, where he was interrogated on charges related to Magdi el-Shafie’s “Metro”. Sharqawi was allowed to go home sometime around noon, but the interrogation is not over yet, and it seems the (Mubarak’s book-burning) govt wanna push for a trial in court.

More worryingly is the news about the Mahalla detainees… The confirmed names of those who “disappeared” in State Security custody in Mahalla, according to Socialist sources in Cairo, are: Ghazl el-Mahalla labor activists Kamal el-Fayoumi, blogger Kareem el-Beheiri, Tarek Amin el-Senoussi and Abdel Halim Ahmad as well as others from outside the company: Mostafa Elzoghby Ibrahim, Ibrahim Abdallah, Mahmoud Ahmad. There are unconfirmed reports these detainees, whose release had been ordered earlier by the Prosecutor, are now transferred to Bourg el-Arab Prison (Alexandria). But no one could confirm this from the Socialist and legal sources in Cairo I phoned. If this is true, then this means the Interior Ministry has issued them detention decrees.

I received this message from a Turkish activist who saw Kareem el-Beheiri ten mins before his arrest on the 7th of April:

I am Cigdem Cidamlı from Turkey and I was in Mahalla on 6th April as a representative of Turkish workers movement and Hayat TV together with … and Kareem. Actually Kareem was arrested just 10 minutes after we left the hotel we stayed together at late evening. We had to return back to Turkey on 7th and after our program about Mahalla on Hayat TV various solidarity actions and statements are issued by Turkish labor circles. Below is the statement of Confederation of Progressive Trade Unions of Turkey (80 thousand membership) about Mahalla workers.
In solidarity,
Cigdem Cidamli
Stop The Repression of the Egyptian Workers Movement
In response to a call for a strike on April 6th by the workers in the Mahalla textile complex, the biggest factory in Egypt, the Mubarek regime decided to occupy El Mahalla complex with security forces, abduct strike committee leaders Kamal El Faioumy and Tarek Amin and arrest political
activists of every political tendency in Cairo and other cities. Not able to suppress the protests, the Mubarak security forces used rubber bullets, tear gas and live ammunition against the Mahalla people who decided to protest on the streets of the city and in different villages, leaving at least two dead and hundreds injured and around 800 arrested.
We send our solidarity to the Egyptian workers and their supporters. We call on the Egyptian dictatorship to release the 800 detained yesterday including more than 150 political activists (socialist, liberals and Islamists), more than 600 protesters from Mahalla (mainly women and children) and Mahalla strike committee leaders.
Tayfun GORGUN
GENERAL SECRETARY OF DISK

I received also photos of the solidarity protest that took place in front of the Egyptian Embassy in Paris… Click below…

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