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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: pigs

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.

Class action

Posted on 13/07/200907/01/2021 By 3arabawy

My report for Al-Masry Al-Youm’s English Edition:

The workers had gone on strike yesterday, around 3:30pm, protesting the delay in pay. Some workers who spoke to Al-Masry Al-Youm complained they had not received their wages for three months.
On Saturday night, striker Alaa Gameel said, the owner, Engineer Ismail Abul Sebae, showed up in the factory to announce its “temporary closure” for 49 days, due to financial problems. “He also told us to go seek other jobs elsewhere if we can,” Gameel added.
The workers fearing this was a precursor to liquidating the firm, refused the “holiday” and insisted on receiving their full pay. On Sunday morning, according to workers’ accounts, senior police officers visited the factory and assured the workers they’d be paid by 3pm.
“When the clock struck 3pm, everyone from the management disappeared,” said Gameel. “The police also disappeared after locking us up in the factory, sealing the gates.”
The company, which is located in Mahalla’s Qualified Industrial Zone, produces towels and bathroom ropes for exports to the US, Israel, South Korea, according to Hamdi Hussein, the director of Afaq Center, a labor rights group. It neighbors an intersection of four major highways that run in the Nile Delta province. The company includes three factories on its compound, employing more than 8,000 workers according to striker Alaa Gameel.
By 3:30pm, the workers’ patience in the biggest of the three of factories ran out so they started chanting inside the factory gates. In half an hour, “the young women started it all,” said Gameel. “They came from the other factories, and cut the highway and stopped the buses and cars. We were embarrassed, and couldn’t leave them alone, so the men were encouraged to break the gate and join the women’s protest.”
Central Security Forces, whose camp is located within walking distance form the factory swiftly showed up, and clashed with the strikers who smashed at least three cars and one bus who hit a woman worker. The traffic was brought to halt from 4 to 7pm in front of the factory, till members of parliament, security generals and Labor Ministry officials convinced the strikers to clear the road and started negotiations, according to eyewitnesses.
The initial offer made by MP Ezzat Derrag was refused, as it would have left each worker in the factory with LE25 only for a promise the rest of their salaries would be paid “soon.”
“Very few workers in the factory have contracts or decent salaries,” said Hamdi Hussein of Afaq. “Some workers in the weaving section might receive salaries more than a thousand, but this is not the case for the rest.”
The 24-year-old Alaa Gameel told Al-Masry Al-Youm he had been working in the factory for ten years, without a contract, at LE11 daily wage, which he would receive every two weeks. He also added that he had been forced to sign in his resignation with a blank date before he was given a job. “This practice is rampant in the private sector companies,” said Hamdi Hussein.
“The LE25 they offered yesterday was insulting,” Gameel angrily said. “We want our full pay. Already we don’t have health insurance and we can be sacked anytime. At least give us our pay.”
The workers continued striking till 8am this morning, when government officials and management personnel made a new offer by which roughly one third of the late salaries were paid, and the rest was promised on Sunday.
Some workers accepted the offer and returned to work, others refused, and some are still waiting to get paid today. It remains unclear whether the night shift workers will accept the deal or not.
Attempts by Al-Masry Al-Youm to reach Ismail Abul Sebae for a comment failed.
“Do you know what Mahalla did last year?” asked striker Gameel. “We burnt everything to the ground because we could not find bread. Does the government want that to be repeated? We want our pay or else that is what they will get.”

Crackdown on Alexandrian textile workers

Posted on 10/07/200913/03/2015 By 3arabawy

Via the Center for Socialist Studies: State Security and management have launched a crackdown on the Misr Al-Amriya textile workers in Alexandria, following the circulation of a statement threatening to strike over demands related to work conditions. Two workers were suspended from work pending investigation, two others were penalized financially, and two were transferred out of their departments. A number of workers were also summoned to State Security police offices.

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