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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Resources on the Revolutionary Socialists

Updates from Mahalla

Posted on 07/04/200805/02/2021 By 3arabawy

I’ve spoken with an activist in Mahalla, where it’s almost 2pm now. The city is under police occupation, but since last night it’s been quiet.

Try to imagine what the pictures you see of Palestinian towns under occupation… Mahalla is similar to that now. Soldiers, armored vehicles, firetrucks.. Since last night the clashes ended. But who knows, everything may change in a second. The morning shift went in by 7:30am. The production in the factory is still on as I’m talking to you now. We will see how things develop.

Families of detainees have assembled in front of the town’s police stations, trying to see them and bring them food, clothes.

There were unconfirmed reports that blogger Kareem el-Beheiri was detained by the police sometime at night, but Nora says that the reports were merely rumors.

In other news, The Egyptian Workers and Trade Unions Watch issued a report on the industrial action in February. Some stats from the report: 42,000 workers took part in either strikes, sit-ins or demonstrations during that month, while 54,000 workers threatened to do the same… The month also witnessed 22 sit-ins, 13 demonstrations and 10 strikes…
More later…

UPDATE: CLASHES started again at 4pm.

UPDATE: Blogger Ahmad Abdel Fattah called from Mahalla: “This govt wants to kill us and kill everyone here. The demonstrations are strong. Clashes are happening again with the police. I can hardly breath from the teargas. I’ll send you photos soon.”

UPDATE: I’ve spoken to a Socialist activist in Mahalla. He says around 4pm a 2000-strong demonstration started in El-Bahr Street in Mahalla. The protesters were chanting against the govt, price increases, police brutality. The troops cracked down on the demonstration, but that hardly made the demonstrators disperse.. Instead, over the course of an hour, the protest grew to something between 40 to 50,000, according to the activist. It’s passed 7pm now in Mahalla. There is not one demonstration, but several.. Most of the demonstrators’ chants are against the govt and calling for the release of those detained yesterday. The police renewed its crackdown, and arrests are being conducted now.

UPDATE: I received an email from activist Ahmad Droubi:

Sharkawy was harassed at 6th of October police station by maba7eth [Police]. He was hit but no injuries reported; except that he’s really pissed off! He is currently at the public prosecutor’s in 6th of October awaiting a decision; he was not questioned again today. Apparently all male detainees were hit overnight.

UPDATE: Listen to the chants of the protesters in Mahalla: “Hey Gamal [Mubarak]! Tell your dad, Mahalla will fuck him…” while in this video, the Mahalla citizens are chanting: “Hosni [Mubarak]! Fuck you!”

UPDATE: I received the following statement from the Center for Socialist Studies:

In light of recent events in Egypt yesterday April 6, 2008, the Center for Socialist Studies calls on supporters of freedom and justice everywhere in the world to show there support for victims of repression in Egypt. Mount pressure on the Egyptian dictatorship to release more than 800 detained yesterday including; more than 150 political activists (socialists, liberals, and Islamists), more than 600 protesters from Mahalla (mainly women and children) and Mahalah strike Committee leaders Kamal El-Faioumy and Tarek Amin- who are facing serious allegations of agitation which can lead to long prison sentences.
On the background of a call for strike on April 6th in Mahalla textile complex by the workers, political forces decided to support the strike through parallel symbolic work stoppage and peaceful protests. However, the Mubarak regime in retaliation decided to occupy El-Mahalla complex with security forces, abduct strike committee leaders Kamal El-Faioumy and Tarek Amin, 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 Mahalla people who decided to protest on the streets of the city and in different villages, leaving at least two dead and hundreds injured.
As fighters in this struggle, the Center for Socialist Studies, calls on all activists and supporters of freedom and justice everywhere in the world to support us in our fight. The inspirational fight of the Egyptian working class over the past 18 months, which culminated in El-Mahllah events and the mass protests of yesterday –and the terrified reactions of the Mubarak regime- have proved our faith in the centrality of the working class to liberate Egypt from dictatorship and exploitation.
We call upon you circulate the news about the maximum repression and violence of the Mubarak regime, which left at least two killed in Mahalla, including a 9-year old boy. We call upon you to organize rallies and protests in front of the Egyptian embassy where you live and to send protest messages and letters against the Mubarak regime.
Long live the struggle of the working class!

UPDATE: The confirmed deaths in Mahalla go up to 4 martyrs till now. The police continued for the second day cracking down on protesters, who used molotov cocktails and rocks, in scenes reminiscent of the Palestinian intifada… Tadamon reports that the mass demonstrations today was targeting Mahalla’s Police Station where many of the detainees are locked up. Tadamon puts the number of demonstrators at 20,000. However two Socialist activists who took part in the protests insist the numbers were higher and go up to 40 or 50,000.

Here’s also a report from the Daily News Egypt by Sarah Carr:

Public prosecutor Abdel Meguid Mahmoud announced Monday that 157 people involved in the demonstrations which erupted in Mahalla on Sunday have been charged with a range of offenses including riotous assembly and criminal damage.
Violence again erupted in the town on Monday. Protests began in the afternoon at around 4 pm, in a repeat of yesterday’s events when thousands of Mahalla residents and workers in the Ghazl El-Mahalla textile factory took to the streets following the afternoon shift.
Protesters are angry about the collapse of a strike in the Ghazl El-Mahalla factory, planned for Sunday but which was aborted after intimidation by security bodies and internal divisions between workers.
During yesterday’s demonstrations violent clashes occurred between members of security bodies and protesters. According to Mahmoud, the clashes resulted in the injury of 35 demonstrators, 26 policemen and three senior officers.
The public prosecutor denied rumors that fatalities occurred during yesterday’s demonstrations.
Activist websites had published reports that two people had been killed when security bodies used teargas and live ammunition to contain the demonstration.
Mahmoud also said that eleven shops and two schools were damaged during yesterday’s protests.
An eyewitness who was in Mahalla on Monday told Daily News Egypt that the situation remains extremely tense.
“Relatives of people who have been arrested started a procession from the public prosecution office in Mahalla to the Shona Square,” said Ahmad Ghazi, a lawyer with the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights.
“Young men ripped down a poster of [President] Mubarak in the square and set it alight,” he continued.
“Security bodies are using teargas and firing ammunition at the crowd and both protesters and members of security bodies have been injured,” Ghazi said.

Photographer and friend Nasser Nouri was in Mahalla on Sunday, and was shot in the leg by a rubber bullet. Despite being in so much pain, Nasser continued reporting on Monday, limping his way around the rough streets in Mahalla, taking shots of the riots as well as the police violence. Below are a couple of the photos he took today of the Mahalla heroes smashing Mubarak’s posters.

UPDATE: Prosecutor ordered the detention of blogger Muhammad el-Sharqawi and Kefaya’s Muhammad el-Ashqar for 15 days pending investigation.
Meanwhile, the Textile Workers’ League activists Kamal el-Fayoumi and Tarek el-Senoussi are locked up in the notorious State Security local office in Mahalla, while reports are conflicting whether Ghazl el-Mahalla blogger Kareem el-Beheiri was detained or did he “disappear.” A solidarity committee has been set up to support the detainees. WE NEED DONATIONS FOR THE DETAINEES in Cairo, Mahalla and the other provinces. If you are in Cairo, just go to the Hisham Mubarak Law Center (1 Souq el-Tawfiqiya St) and see how you can help.

UPDATE: Zeinobia continues blogging the protests and monitoring the local press, while Per Björklund is twittering from Mahalla.

UPDATE: The 6th of April Strike Blog reports with photos on a spontaneous protest in front of Cairo’s Abdeen Court, and receives health complaints from Mahalla over the pigs’ showering the city with teargas bombs.

UPDATE: More photos of Day 2 of the Mahalla riots, taken by James Buck…

  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​
  • ​Mahalla Uprising, 7 April 2008, Photo taken by James Buck​

“You can feel there were support for the demonstrators among the citizens,” James told me over the phone. “Whenever police attacked the crowds, you always found residents opening up their homes for those who are trying to escape.”

UPDATE: A report by labor journalist Jano Charbel on the second day of rioting in Mahalla:

A popular uprising has been taking place in Al Mahalla Al Kobra since April 6. Local residents, in the tens of thousands, took to the streets of this Nile Delta city in protest against price hikes, and in protest against the detention of more than 300 locals. With stone-throwing youth and Central Security Forces engaged in running street battles Al Mahalla has come to resemble the occupied Palestinian territories; and the protests in this city have come to resemble an intifada. Over 100 civilians and members of the security forces have been injured in clashes, and at least one civilian (a 15 year old boy) has been killed.
Hundreds of CSF trucks have been deployed around the city and hundreds more within it. Upon approaching the outskirts of Al Mahalla on the night of April 7 one could clearly notice that the security forces were facing stiff resistance on the streets – because tens of these CSF trucks, which were stationed around the city, had their windshields smashed-in (despite the protective metal grids covering them.) Tear gas stings the eyes and irritates the respiratory system upon entering the city itself.
In the neighborhood of Sekket Tanta black clad riot police were firing tear gas canisters at just about anybody on the streets – including women, children, and the elderly; other troops opened fire on protesters using shotgun shells filled with rubber-coated pellets. Yet CSF troops could not disperse the youth protesters on the streets of this neighborhood. Male teenagers, along with (a significant number of unemployed) youths in their early twenties were at the forefront of these clashes with the CSF. Youth rained stones down upon the security forces and hurled Molotov cocktails at them. Clashes in this neighborhood had subsided only after 11pm.
These youths chanted very expressive slogans against Hosni Mubarak, the government, and the interior ministry. Other protesters had destroyed photos and portraits of the Egyptian president that were found on the streets.
Every single resident of Al Mahalla, with whom I spoke, confirmed that the non-violent demonstrations against price increases on April 6 had turned violent only after security forces moved to forcefully disperse demonstrators. Thus a peaceful demonstration quickly turned into a violent expression of popular discontent. Public properties and private enterprises have been the targets of attacks – a microbus was set ablaze, while three schools were torched, and two branches of the local ful & falafel franchise Al-Baghl were partially destroyed. It could’ve been local youth protesters who were behind these acts, or it could very well be the doing of destructive elements deployed by the interior ministry – in order to serve as a pretext for further crackdowns, and/or to tarnish the image of the protesters.
One youth protester said “I don’t know who set fire to the three schools, or why they did so? But I think I understand the motives behind the burning of the microbus and the attack on the Al-Baghl Restaurants. The microbus was a state-owned vehicle, and thus a natural target for attack. As for Al-Baghl, I believe the restaurants were attacked due to popular discontent with rising food prices – only five years ago a ful or falafel sandwich at Al-Baghl cost 35 piasters, it now costs 65 piasters per sandwich.”
Another youth protester on the street asked a member of the riot police “when’s the last time you had a bite to eat? The officers aren’t feeding you poor folks are they?” Looking exhausted and being unable to leave his spot, he quietly replied “we haven’t had anything to eat in nearly 24 hours.”

Some photos taken by Jano:

  • Teargassed by the Police (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Molotov Cocktails (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Empty Tear Gas Canisters (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Rocks and Fires (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Teargassed by the Police (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Teargassed by the Police (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Burnt school in Mahalla (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Burnt state-owned van (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Police in Mahalla (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Police in Mahalla (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Mubarak's poster defaced in Mahalla (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Seket Tanta Neighborhood in Mahalla (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Seket Tanta Neighborhood in Mahalla (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Protesters confronting the CSF (Photo by Jano Charbel)
  • Youth Protesters with Rocks in their hand - CSF about to receive another shower (Photo by Jano Charbel)

UPDATE: It’s confirmed Kareem el-Beheiri is in police custody. He was spotted at the Tanta Prosecutor’s office where he’s undergoing interrogation. Below is a portrait I took of Kareem last January.

UPDATE: Blogger Ahmad Abdel Fattah sent me some photos and video clips from Mahalla:

  • انتفاضة ابريل بالمحلة، عدسة أحمد عبد الفتاح
  • انتفاضة ابريل بالمحلة، عدسة أحمد عبد الفتاح
  • انتفاضة ابريل بالمحلة، عدسة أحمد عبد الفتاح

And here’s an AP report by Paul Schemm:

Police fired tear gas and beat protesters Monday, and demonstrators angry over rising prices and low wages tore down a billboard of Egypt’s president in a second day of violence in a northern Egyptian city.
The clahes began when several hundred young men massed in the main square of the Nile Delta city of Mahalla al-Kobra. They threw rocks at a large advertising billboard of President Hosni Mubarak in the center of the square, then slashed the picture with knives, then toppled the billboard.
Riot police then charged the group, firing heavy volleys of tear gas. Police pulled some of the men to the pavement and beat them with batons or fists. In the melee, other protesters threw stones at police or grabbed canisters of tear gas and threw them back at the police.
At least 25 people were arrested, and 15 protesters and five policemen were hurt in the violence, security officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the press.
The clashes followed similar rioting Sunday, when thousands of demonstrators torched buildings, looted shops and hurled bricks at the police in this gritty industrial town. Sunday’s violence erupted after textile factory workers called off a strike planned for the morning to protest low wages.

Mahalla Updates: Troops step up presence; Labor organizers under govt pressure; FACTORY TO STRIKE 6 APRIL; SOLIDARITY NEEDED

Posted on 03/04/200805/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Mubarak’s pigs have stepped up their presence in the Nile Delta town of Mahalla, as the largest textile mill in the Middle East is set to strike in less than three days…

As of the morning of the 6th of April, production at Ghazl el-Mahalla will be brought to a complete halt… The workers are raising demands, similar to the 14 points previously articulated by the Textile Workers’ League activists, the most important of which are:

1-Raising the living standards of all workers in the textile sector, to suit the skyrocketing increase in prices of basic commodities. The leaders on the factory floor are demanding that the national minimum wage, which hasn’t changed from 1984, to be increased from LE35 (US$6.4) to LE1,200 (US$218).
2-Increasing the monthly food allowance to LE150
3-Increasing the monthly bonuses to be at least 20% of the basic salary
4-Allocating housing allowances
5-Reforming the job promotions regulations
6-Job security and compensations for workers who hold college degrees or are pursuing higher education
7-Setting a fixed annual date, in a period of time no later than a month from the end of the Fiscal Year, to pay the workers their gross annual bonuses (profit shares + incentives + production plan goals’ achievement bonuses)
8-Prosecuting the former and current corrupt management officials who brought losses to the Ghazl el-Mahalla company
9-Restructuring the company hospital, contracting more medical specialists

The govt has already launched an open propaganda warfare against the organizers in the factory.. I’m receiving also reports of direct police threats and intimidation against activists, as well as “media leaks” about a planned mass round up of activists to abort the industrial action. Sarah Carr reports:

State security bodies have begun mobilizing outside the Ghazl El-Mahalla textile factory ahead of the strike planned for next Sunday, April 6, calling for better pay and conditions.
According to the website egyworkers.blogspot.com eight central security trucks containing police officers, soldiers and groups of the plainclothes police used to intimidate and attack protesters during demonstrations, have assembled around the factory.
The blog describes this mobilization as “the preparatory stage” of an attack on factory workers in the event of a strike.
The website also alleges that members of security bodies have given keys to individuals who will close the factory after the last shift on April 5 in order to prevent workers striking inside the factory.
Factory employees have repeatedly complained of collusion between the administration and workers’ syndicate officials, who they accuse of being cronies of the ruling National Democratic Party.
In addition, Kareem El-Beheiry, author of the website, told Daily News Egypt that 15 workers from the company were summoned to a police checkpoint in Mahalla, located in Gharbeia governorate. Members of security bodies told the men to intimidate co-workers into calling off the strike by telling them that if they do go on strike, they would be attacked by the police.
El-Beheiry says that the intimidation has had little effect on workers’ resolve.
“In a company as huge as this you have to expect that there will be a few workers working as informers for security bodies,” El-Beheiry said. “And the threats and intimidation are normal, we’ve seen it before. Nonetheless it is expected that around 20,000 workers will go on strike on Sunday regardless of these threats,” he continued.
In an attempt to quell strike momentum, factory officials displayed notices on Sunday in which they announced that food allowances had been increased from LE 43 to LE 90 by minister of investment Mahmoud Mohieldin.
Workers say that soaring food prices justify a LE 150 food allowance.

A socialist activist in Mahalla I spoke with today said the troops are in sight close to the company compound, and goons have starting wielding some of the factory’s gates…
In another more alarming development, Hussein Megawer (the head of Mubarak’s National Democratic Party’s parliamentary bloc and the head of the corrupt, state-backed General Federation of Trade Unions) summoned a group of five labor leaders to meet him in Cairo.: Muhammad el-Attar, Sayyed Habib, Magdi Sherif, Faisal Laqousha, Abdel Qader el-Deeb. Megawer treated them in a humiliating way, and didn’t dismiss them except after they signed a pledge not to go on strike on 6 April!! I was critical in a previous posting of some labor leaders in the factory, without mentioning their names, for being coopted by the govt… I’m afraid ya shabab, I meant no one but the names listed above. I didn’t want to mention them by name for a bunch of reasons which I won’t be discussing now, but I find no other choice but to go public against them as the strike approaches.. Attar and Habib had played a brave and central role in the December 2006 strike, and in launching the fight in January 2007 against the state-backed Factory Union Committee… But gradually over the course of the following months, both labor leaders and the circle around them, in other words the CTUWS posse, were being coopted during their rounds of negotiations with the Federation and govt officials… This has got nothing with those activists being insincere, or posers… This was more or less the inevitable outcome of the CTUWS emphasis on “pragmatisim” and “abandon[ing] overt political demands to focus on bread-and-butter issues” This “pragmatist” attitude towards whatever crises in the factory, meant that these labor leaders were susceptible to basically “whoever is gonna solve it”.. Over the course of the months throughout 2007, as hostility on the factory floor kept ascending against the state-backed union officials, an idea was floated related to the establishment of a “Representatives’ Committee,” that will act as a liaison between the workers on the factory floor and the Factory Union Committee. Attar and his comrades did accept the offer on a number of occasions, only to be rebuked by the workers back in the factory after they’d return from Megawer’s office or when it became clear they’d be powerless.. During the Sept 2007 strike, I heard severe complaints against the CTUWS activists in the factory, by four organizers in Ghazl el-Mahalla (one independent leftist and three socialists). Their complaints centered around Attar and the CTUWS activists, that while giving militant statements to the media they tried repeatedly to curb the militancy of the strike on the ground, showed their willingness to lower down the ceiling of the workers’ demands in negotiations with the govt officials, and finally tried to disband the strike as soon as they were released from police custody (only to U-turn under pressure from the factory floor).. Habib may be a slightly different story, standing out as a more experienced organizer among his peers, he remained as the most left-leaning activist in the CTUWS faction, and it was his strong intervention in the final round of negotiations in Sept 2007 that saved his faction’s face with Attar going on one compromise after the other.. Following the strike, the CTUWS faction played a sabotaging role when it came to initiatives put forward by organizers from other factions.. Attar, Habib and co even went as far as putting up three big banners signed with their names, following the end of the Sept 2007 Strike, in the factory, Shouna Sq and in front of the local NDP HQ, extending support to the NDP local MP… These activists were promised, to be the “unofficial representatives” of the workers. The Factory Union Committee was not to be impeached, the govt made it clear to them (even after the resignation of Seddiq Siyam, the head of the FUC, who was hospitalized by the Sept 2007 strikers when he suggested an end to the industrial action), but in exchange the govt claimed it was to “sideline” the FUC and deal with this posse as the “real representatives.” Attar for example during his round of negotiations with Megawer in the summer of 2007, repeated several times to me (with a sense of victory) how Megawer told him: “We consider you the representatives of the workers. If you need anything just come straight to my office. But I don’t want troubles in the factory.” That deal however meant that Attar and Co went acutely sectarian against the other factions in the factory, refrained from taking the fight against the govt-backed unions forward, as well as aborting or hijacking plans of protests by other factions… It really breaks my heart to be writing this, since Attar and Habib were among some of my earliest contacts in Mahalla; their role in Dec 2006 inspired me tremendously, and we enjoyed a good personal relationship till I left for Berkeley… But I cannot be silent in front of this outright disgusting behavior by the two or let my personal feelings interfere in my judgement of the situation, especially as the countdown for the strike has started…

But the only positive outcome from this CTUWS’ shift to the right, is that organizers from the radical left who played an important, yet not as central as that of the CTUWS’, role in the Dec 2006 strike, incrementally increased their power base on the factory floor, rising to prominence with the Sept 2007 strike, and then mobilized the biggest anti-regime workers protest under Mubarak’s reign last February… And it’s those activists, centered around the Mahalla-based Textile Workers’ League, who’ll be be leading the coming strike, while the CTUWS activists have official kissed Megawer’s ass and signed the pledge they won’t be striking.. How did we know about the details of the meeting? Upon learning of the CTUWS’ activists’ planned trip to Cairo, two of the Textile Workers’ League activists, Wael Habib and Kamal el-Fayoumi, smelt a rat and forced their way to be part of the delegation. Wael and Kamal attended the meeting, heard Megawer’s threats, saw their colleagues signing the pledge.. but the two bravely refused to sign and left… A socialist activist in Mahalla confirmed to me also today that the CTUWS faction has distributed leaflets inside the factory announcing “they have nothing to do with the strike on 6 April.” Another small group affiliated with the Nasserist Party in Mahalla also distributed anti-strike statements.. The Textile Workers’ League activists are coming under immense pressures to call the strike off, but my sources confirm that up till now the organizers are still determined to go ahead..

Activists elsewhere are gearing up for industrial actions in solidarity with Ghazl el-Mahalla, scheduled to go simultaneously on 6 April… and student demonstrations are planned in Helwan and Cairo universities… The calls for a general strike continue to fill the Egyptian cyberspace in blog postings, emails, and facebook messages and exchanged in SMSs… There’s a level of optimism generally sensed in what one reads and I get emails from friends about their plans to not show up for work on 6 April… However, I still stick by my previous position that it’s a mistake to call for a “general strike” by elitist groups from the top and I find a degree of political opportunism and adventurism in this call… (It seems however the US Embassy in Cairo is taking the call seriously and has threatened to fire any local employee who misses work on that day)… You may come across reports that quote Magdi Hussein claiming that the Revolutionary Socialists are part of the joint call for the general strike… This is NOT true… The RS took part in the coordination meetings held by the opposition groups to discuss solidarity with 6th of April Mahalla strike, but the quixotic call for the general strike came initially from Magdi Hussein, and Kefaya’s Abdel Halim Qandeel jumped on it.. The RS made it clear to the colleagues in the opposition groups that a general strike cannot be brought about by groups which still lack roots in the workplaces, and that the RS contribution will be solely limited to mobilization in Mahalla itself and to the direct solidarity actions with the Mahalla strikers in the provincial industrial urban centers and the universities… In the same way that independent national labor unions are not built by some calls dropping from the sky (rather they should be [and are being] built from below factory by factory), general strikes cannot happen by some cyber-calls dropping from above by those who do not enjoy grassroots support… But one has to admit that it’s a positive phenomenon to see how the “culture of strikes” (as the media dubs it) is spreading and enjoying the support of the youth, unlike the dark days of the 1990s…

Comrades around the world, keep your eyes on Mahalla.. This coming battle will be much fiercer than the two previous strikes… We need your solidarity.. We need statements of support from labor unions, syndicates, student unions, community associations, human rights groups… Email me whatever you manage to get, and I’ll do my best to see your statements make it to Mahalla…

My heart and thoughts go out to the Textile Workers’ League, to the men and women in the factory… They are our biggest hope to rid this country of the US-backed Mubarak’s dictatorship…

Helwan U students to demonstrate in solidarity with the Mahalla strikers

Posted on 03/04/200805/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Following their comrades in Cairo University, the Resistance Students in Helwan University have called for a demonstration on campus, 6 April, 10:30am in solidarity with the Ghazl el-Mahalla strikers.

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