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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: transport

Microbus drivers abused by police, threaten to strike

Posted on 25/09/200729/03/2015 By 3arabawy

From the Daily Star Egypt…

Firmly stuck at the bottom of the pecking order, Egyptian microbus drivers are forced by the police to transport investigation teams to security missions on a daily basis.
In addition to the social stigma attached to being a microbus drivers in Egypt, drivers at the Ataba-Helwan (Downtown Cairo) line have been ousted from their bus station by the local authorities, who now have no alternative but to pick up patrons from Port Said Street.
Drivers are threatening to go on strike due to a hectic situation where they have no protection from police harassment or even space where they can pick up commuters.
“We now stand in the middle of the road, which makes us vulnerable to traffic police officers who confiscate licenses for any reason,” microbus owner, Muhammad Negima told Daily News Egypt.
When the buses were removed, street vendors invaded the space where only a week ago microbus drivers used to pick up patrons, turning it into a miniature market area.
“There are more than a 100 buses on this line, which means that it supports at least 300 families,” said Negima.
Most of the commuters are either lawyers from Helwan that come to Baab El Khalq court house or Helwan residents who sell merchandise in Ataba.
“This line in particular is a major transport artery because it moves thousands of people everyday,” Negima explained.
A similar scenario took place three years ago when the buses were removed from the area previously known as the Gaza market.
“We went on strike and they reacted by impounding a number of buses and detaining drivers. When they saw that things were getting out of hand, they provided us with space beneath the intersection of Azhar Bridge. This is the space they removed us from a week ago,” Negima said.
Negima also complains that on a daily basis, security personnel from the Gamalia police station force drivers to transport them on their raids, denying them a full working day’s income.

There’s nothing that describes the abuse faced by the Egyptian microbus drivers and Mubarak’s pigs more than the case of Emad Kabeer.

Labor unrest spreads

Posted on 15/05/200728/12/2020 By 3arabawy

From IPS:

Workers in Cairo’s vital public transport sector threatened to go on strike earlier this month if the state did not meet their list of demands. The incident was only the latest in a spate of strikes and protests in recent months that local commentators attribute to the steadily rising cost of living.
“These workers’ actions are a result of the crushing economic situation,” Magdi Hussein, secretary-general of the Labour Party, officially frozen by the government since 2000, told IPS. “But with the current political upheaval in Egypt, workers have begun breaking down the wall of fear by wielding the weapons of the strike and the sit-in.”
On May 1, some 3,000 employees of the state-run Transportation Authority, including drivers, ticket collectors and maintenance workers, threatened a general strike, demanding better pay and benefits. In a show of force, workers briefly prevented buses from departing from a major depot in the capital’s Nasr City district.
After calling for a sit-in strike until their demands were met, transport workers were joined on the following day by an estimated 1,000 employees of Cairo’s state-run Metro Authority, who produced a similar list of demands.
Two days of subsequent negotiations resulted in a promise from the transportation ministry that workers’ complaints would be looked into. The ministry further vowed to issue a decision on the matter later this month.
“We held the sit-in because we demand our basic rights, which are stipulated by law,” a leader of the Metro workers’ labor action told IPS. “But if we aren’t granted our basic rights, we’ll call for a major sit-in strike in earnest.”
According to Ali Hashem, editor-in-chief at the government-run Dar al-Tahrir print house and a specialist on transport issues, the ministry will most likely meet most, if not all, of the workers’ demands.
“The ministry is committed to improving public transport services,” he told IPS. “But this can’t be done without improving the situation of the workers in the sector.”
Egypt has seen an unprecedented number of organized labor actions in the last six months. Since the beginning of this year, more than 50 strikes and labor protests have been called, with 11 in the last week of April alone.
Labour actions have been organized in several of Egypt’s most important industries, in both the public and private sectors. In addition to pubic transport, these have included the textiles, construction and industrial manufacturing sectors.
The biggest labor action was in December, when some 25,000 workers participated in a strike at the state-owned Egypt Company for Spinning and Weaving in the Nile Delta city of Mahalla. After three days of striking, which reportedly cost the company some 12 million dollars, workers’ demands for promised bonuses were finally met.
Saad al-Husseini, MP from Mahalla and secretary-general of the Muslim Brotherhood bloc in parliament, described the strike as “the spark that inspired other oppressed workers in Egypt to press for their rights.”
He went on to cite the main reasons for the success of the Mahalla action. “Workers held a peaceful strike and didn’t threaten any of the company’s assets, they didn’t insult the government and they didn’t get sidetracked by other political issues,” al-Husseini told IPS.
Notably, the recent labor unrest has been marked by the absence of official union representation, with most actions being independently organized by workers themselves. The reason for this, say labor organizers and commentators, is that the Egyptian Trade Union Federation (ETUF) — the only legal union representation available — has largely failed to protect workers’ rights.
They claim that the ETUF lacks genuine independence and ultimately answers to the ruling National Democratic Party of President Hosni Mubarak. In many cases, along with better pay and benefits, strike organizers have also demanded the removal of their official union representatives.
“Our union has always sided with the state rather than siding with us,” said the organizer of the metro sit-in, who did not wish to be named.

Labor updates

Posted on 07/05/200728/12/2020 By 3arabawy

The food processing workers sit-in enters its third day in Suez, despite security intimidation, while in Cairo the head of the regime-controlled General Union of Transportation Workers Wagih Mustafa Amin accused “Kefaya elements” of standing behind the latest public transportation strike.

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