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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: mubarak

“The strikes are a new fashion threatening all of Egypt’s companies”

Posted on 03/10/200729/12/2020 By 3arabawy

The Tanta Flax and Oils Company workers scored a victory, suspending their sit-in after they achieved most of their demands.
And as soon as this dispute was settled, 700 textile workers went on strike in Damietta Spinning and Weaving Company demanding their annual profit shares. The chairman of the company, is quoted by Al-Masry Al-Youm as saying: “Strikes have become a fashion that threatens the Egyptian factories”

More details could also be found in this AFP report:

Egypt struggled Tuesday to stem a rising tide of industrial action as officials rushed to end the third strike in a week, the latest challenge to President Hosni Mubarak’s regime.
Labour ministry officials met employee representatives at the Damietta Spinning and Weaving Co to come to an agreement just 24 hours after workers kicked off their strike, the official MENA news agency said.
Labour Minister Aisha Abdel Hadi told reporters she was eager to “protect the interests and rights of the workers.”
On Saturday, some 24,000 workers at the Mahalla Spinning and Weaving Co ended their strike over unpaid profit shares and low wages after the government agreed to meet their demands.
The same pattern followed at the Tanta Linseed and Oil factory, where hundreds of workers struck to demand unpaid profit shares, with their demands swiftly met.
“The strikes are a new fashion threatening all of Egypt’s companies,” the chairman of the Damietta factory told the independent daily al-Masry al-Youm.

Solidarity needed from international rights groups

Posted on 28/09/200729/03/2015 By 3arabawy

Despite all the criticism I level against Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International regarding some of their stands towards the Palestinian cause, I’ve always respected their sincere solidarity campaigns launched with Egyptian activists. But one thing I cannot comprehend at the moment, is how these two rights watchdogs have paid so much attention to demos organized by (and the security crackdowns against) Kefaya activists, who managed at best to mobilize a thousand in downtown, yet I haven’t seen up till now a single statement from their MENA divisions regarding 27,000 Mahalla strikers and their families in the ME’s biggest textile mill, who are clearly under the threat of police assault as Hosni’s regime officials come out almost everyday in the press and on TV denouncing the “illegal” action by the workers.

I hope our friends in HRW and Amnesty do not forget about the Mahalla workers, and join in the calls to the Egyptian government not to use force against the strikers.

We do not welcome any intervention by any Western govt. These are the officials who have been pimping for Mubarak over the past 26 years of his martial rule. It’s them who broker the economic deals that impoverished Mahalla and the Egyptian provinces. It’s them who stay silent and at best “express concern” while pro-democracy activists as well as ordinary Egyptians get sodomized in Mubarak’s police stations. They are hypocrites, criminals and liars.

But we always welcome solidarity from the international civil society activists, labor unions and citizen groups…. and it has never been as much needed as it is the case today.

JimiBaba and the 40 Thieves جيمي بابا والمليون حرامي

Posted on 28/09/200729/03/2015 By 3arabawy

In solidarity with Egyptian journalists and editors sentenced to prison for “defaming” Hosni the dictator and his corrupt NDP.

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