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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: protests

Train drivers demand promised pay raise, threaten to strike

Posted on 21/11/200804/01/2021 By 3arabawy

Train drivers denounce their state-owned management سائقو القطارات ينددون بالإدارة

Sarah Carr reports:

Train drivers are threatening to strike unless the Egyptian Railway Authority (ERA) puts into an effect an increase in an incentive payment promised to them.
Some 50 train drivers assembled in central Cairo’s Ramses station at noon on Thursday before a delegation of four drivers attempted to meet ERA staff in order to discuss their demand that drivers receive an allowance paid according to the number of kilometers traveled.
Drivers want the ‘kilometer allowance,’ which currently stands at 11 piasters, to be increased to 25 piasters, and say that the ERA’s administration has not implemented this demand.
The delegation of four drivers was told that no one from ERA management was in the office.
When the entire group of train drivers went up the office accompanied by journalists, a member of the building’s security attempted to forcibly take photographer Hossam El-Hamalawy’s camera from him, but was prevented from doing so by the train drivers.
Train drivers had threatened to disrupt train services by staging a sit-in on the railway tracks, but suspended their protest after they were told that a meeting to discuss their demands would be held with ERA officials on Monday Nov. 24.
ERA blue-collar workers have long complained about poor wages and working conditions.
In February of this year, hundreds of train drivers staged a sit-in on the railway tracks.
Last year, in December, train safety technicians held a protest during which they warned about the dire safety situation on the Egyptian railways.
Technicians told Daily News Egypt during the December protest that mismanagement and corruption within the ERA Department of Industrial Safety has made it impossible for them to do their jobs.
During yesterday’s protest train drivers showed journalists conditions inside a train engine.
The dilapidated engine was filthy, missing equipment and covered both inside and on its exterior by what drivers say is flammable oil.
Drivers pointed to the door separating the main engine unit from the driver’s cab. The door is missing a handle, forcing train drivers to keep the door shut using a rock in order to protect their hearing from the din of the engine.
Dorms in the drivers’ rest house were in a similar state.
Train driver Muhammad Gamal says that the state-controlled official union has had little success in realizing drivers’ demands.
“Members of the union can’t do anything for us. They can’t do anything except try to calm things down between us and the management,” Gamal told the press.
Gamal, whose basic salary after 10 years of service is LE 170, says that drivers are at “boiling point.”
“Doctors have replacements, police generals have replacements but ERA train drivers are the only qualified drivers in Egypt,” Gamal said.
“The ERA totally ignores train drivers — even though we are the railway.”

Sarah uploaded a Flickr set. You can watch some pix I took here. Journalist Jano Charbel also blogged the protest, and has some photos here.

I couldn’t attend the sit-in staged by the industrial safety workers, but blogger Ahmad Abdel Fattah was there, and has a report here.

Train drivers threaten to strike 25 Nov

Posted on 20/11/200804/01/2021 By 3arabawy

Around 50 train drivers from different provinces assembled today in Misr Station, Ramses, shortly after 12 noon. The drivers denounced the results of the morning meeting held with the management, and threatened to block the 2pm Turbini train (yep, the same one that was stopped last year). The state-owned Railway Authorities told the drivers’ representatives that their demands to raise the incentives from 11pt to 25pt per kilometer, were rejected. Following the protest, and the threat to block the trains. The chief of police in station negotiated with the drivers, who only suspended their assembly around 1:40pm, awaiting the results of another meeting promised by the govt on 24 November. The drivers threatened to launch a strike on 25 November if their demands are not met…

I’ll upload more pix and post a longer report later.

Train drivers vent their anger on govt policies سائقو القطارات ينددون بسياسات الحكومة والهيئة

Cairo U students march against fees

Posted on 19/11/200819/12/2020 By 3arabawy

Police troops surrounded Cairo University today, as hundreds of students demonstrated against the rising education fees.

Banners against fees معرض طلاب حركة حقي ضد زيادة المصاريف

After distributing leaflets and engaging with fellow students in discussions over the state of economy and education in Egypt, the Socialist-led Haqqi (My Right) mobilized hundreds in a march.

Cairo U students march against fees طلاب حركة حقي يتظاهرون ضد زيادة المصاريف

Protesters denounced Mubarak, his son Gamal, the Education Minister and the entire cabinet. The students marched from one faculty campus to the other, calling on their colleagues to join, while the chants continued.

Cairo U students march against fees طلاب حركة حقي يتظاهرون ضد زيادة المصاريف

The Muslim Brotherhood students were not seen anywhere, but all over the trees they had hung banners encouraging students to pray, part of their recently launched morality crusade on university campuses.

MB poster calling on students to pray

Members of the govt-appointed Student Union were as always present, and tried to disrupt the march, by waving the Egyptian flag, playing on drums, and chanting football slogans. No scuffles took place though.

Police-appointed SU members trying to disrupt the march أعضاء اتحاد الطلبة المعينين يهتفون للأهلي ويحاولون تعطيل المسيرة

High ranking police officers showed up and were following the protesters. They didn’t go for the organizers, but were trying to disperse “ordinary students” and separate them from the “activists.”

Police officers monitoring the students أمن الجامعة يراقب الطلبة

The Haqqi students were quite militant, directing their march sometimes to surround those officers and denounce them in their faces, and shouting they would not be intimidated.

"Don't Pay!"

The march last for over an hour, and ended in an assembly by the university gate, where Haqqi announced they were launching “Don’t Pay!” campaign.

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