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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: unions

Real Estate Tax Collectors to stage a national strike

Posted on 09/08/200907/01/2021 By 3arabawy

Via Al-Masry Al-Youm English Edition:

Egypt’s property tax collectors are starting an open-ended strike on Tuesday, protesting the Finance Ministry’s decree by which a project for a social welfare fund was commissioned to the state-backed union instead of the independent union that enjoys the support of the majority of the ministry’s civil servants.
The tax collectors had organized a “warning protest” Thursday in front of the parliament, but received no official response.
“We informed the (Finance) Minister with our demands and we’re waiting for a reply by the end of tomorrow,” said Abdel Qader Nada, secretary general of the independent Union of Real Estate Tax Authority employees. “If our demands are not met, we will demonstrate everywhere on Tuesday.”
Last Thursday’s protest included demonstrators from seven governorates, but this Tuesday’s strike would cover 27 governorates, Nada added.
Tarek Moustafa, a Qalyoubeya tax collector and the independent union’s treasurer, asserted the “strike isn’t going to end until our demands are fulfilled. The last sit-in that was two years ago lasted for 12 days in the winter, so what would prevent us this time from staying until we get what we want?”
Kamal Abu Eita, president of the independent union, said on Thursday rights organizations and international labor unions would support Tuesday’s strike. “We will receive a response,” he was certain.
When contacted, the Finance Ministry refused to comment claiming that “Ministry of manpower and the trade unionists are the ones in charge of the fund issue, but not the Ministry of Finance,” according to Ahmad Abdel Razek, director of the Finance Minister’s Assistant’s Office. “The Finance Ministry’s role was limited to issuing the decree of the fund’s establishment out of the members’ (state-backed union) membership fees. Anything else is not our responsibility.”
Aisha Abdel Hadi, Minister of Manpower and Immigration was not available for comment, while her office director, Nahed el-Ashry, refused to speak saying: “Sorry, I don’t prefer interviews with press.”
Egypt’s property tax collectors had staged national protests in 2007 that culminated with a 12-day sit-in in front of the ministerial cabinet headquarters in downtown Cairo. They roughly raised their salaries by 325 percent, thanks to the strike, and went on a year later to found Egypt’s first independent trade union in half a century. Their union was recognized by international trade unions like Public Service International, and saw more than 35,000 local tax collectors joining its ranks, out of a total of 55,000.

Young doctors to protest tomorrow over work conditions

Posted on 09/08/200910/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Via Al-Masry Al-Youm English Edition:

Young doctors will stage a protest tomorrow in front of the Doctors Syndicate’s headquarters demanding better salaries for fresh graduates.
Initiated by the “Young Doctors of Egypt” group on Facebook, which currently includes over 700 members, tomorrow’s two-hour demonstration is the first protest organized by that group.
Young Egyptian doctors suffer from very low incomes ranging between LE 150 and LE250 a month, which barely cover the costs of transportation to the hospitals in which they work. They equally suffer from bureaucratic complications with regards to the pursuance of their studies and professional trainings.
“We address our protest to the Ministry of Health and demand salaries ranging from LE 1,000 to LE 2,000,” explains Mohammed Shafiq, a young doctor who disseminated the demonstration online. Fresh graduates demand raising their basic salary to 1000 LE, to reach a minimal level of 2000 LE with the addition of all bonuses and allowances. They also asked for raising various allowances such as the contagion allowance, as well as transportation, post-graduate studies and other allowances.
“We are also concerned about elevating the quality of the scientific education we receive,” adds Shafiq, who hopes that at least 10 percent of the group members on Facebook will show up at noon tomorrow in front of the Doctors’ Syndicate. In their statement of demands, young doctors requested continuing education inside hospitals through visits by established medics, participation in international conferences, scholarships and fellowship programs. They also requested facilitating the admission procedures for post-graduates studies, which are instrumental to medics’ professional path. Further to post-graduate studies, they demanded fixing a ceiling for admission fees at LE600, a sum that has currently jumped to LE3650.
“We are willing to join forces with other doctors’ organizations for common demands later on,” says Shafiq.
Tomorrow’s protest has been discussed at the board of the Doctors’ Syndicate earlier this week and has garnered at least “verbal” support from its senior members, including some of the Muslim Brotherhood activists within the syndicate.
“It is an opportunity for those young doctors to protest,” says Essam el-Aryan, member of both the Brotherhood and the Doctors’ Syndicate Board, adding that any kind of demonstration in support of doctors is appreciated. But it remains unclear how many doctors belonging to the Brotherhood will actually protest on the stairs of the syndicate alongside their young colleagues. In March 2008, Brotherhood members were accused by secular doctors’ advocacy groups of aborting a planned national strike. The Brothers’ involvement in the syndicate politics, they charged, were only limited to “rhetoric” and regional issues like Palestine solidarity campaigns, refraining from active participation in the fight over work conditions.
Some of us will be present tomorrow, but others have meetings outside,” adds el-Aryan who himself says he has a meeting tomorrow at the time of the protest. “If the demonstration is still on when I come back to the syndicate I will attend it,” he concludes.
The head of the syndicate, Hamdi el-Sayyed, was not available for comment.

TUESDAY: TAX COLLECTORS NATIONAL STRIKE إضراب عام لموظفي الضرائب العقارية الثلاثاء إحتجاجا

Posted on 08/08/2009 By 3arabawy

Real Estate Tax Collectors' Strike إضراب موظفي الضرائب العقارية

The independent Union of Real Estate Tax Collectors has given an ultimatum that ends on Monday night to the Finance Ministry, with a set of demands including the reversal of the latest ministerial decree on the Social Welfare fund, threatening a national strike in all Real Estate Tax Authority offices and directorates on Tuesday.

Long Live the Free Union…

النقابة المستقلة لموظفى الضرائب العقارية
تحضر لإضراب عام
معالى وزير المالية :-
عقدت النقابة العامة للضرائب العقارية اجتماع طارئ يوم 7/8/2009 لمواجهة المماطلة فى حقوق العاملين ومحاولات التأمر والسطو على صندوق الرعاية الاجتماعية وتحددت مطالب العاملين فى الآتى
1. تنفيذ المرحلة الثانية بالمساواة مع الضرائب العامة بصرف 3 شهور إثابة والذى كان واجباً تنفيذه بمجرد صدور قانون الضرائب العقارية وتأخر تنفيذ الاتفاق لأكثر من عام
2. بدل الانتقال الثابت الذى وعدتم به
3. تعيين أبناء العاملين خاصة وجود 7 آلاف درجة خالية بالمصلحة
4. تنفيذ قرار سيادتكم رقم 425 لسنة 2009 بتاريخ 28/7/2009 كما نشر بالوقائع المصرية وعدم تمكين أى جهة أخرى لا تمثلنا . خاصة أننا قمنا بإجراء الدراسات والمفاوضات مع مساعديكم الأكفاء .وتم عقد اتفاق بوم 6/7/2009 فى هذا الخصوص .وفى سبيل حماية حقوق العاملين قررت النقابة العامة للعاملين بالضرائب العقارية ونفذت كخطوة أولى إضرابها التحذيرى يوم الخميس 6/8/2009 أمام المصلحة و مجلس الشعب و بهدف تحقيق المطالب العامة للعاملين وتحذير كل من تسول له نفسه بمحاولات السطو على صندوق الرعاية الاجتماعية .كما قررت النقابة العامة مهلة تنتهى يوم الاثنين 10/8/2009 للاستجابة للمطالب العادلة والمشروعة للعاملين وإذا لم تجاب ترقبوا إضرابا عاما وشاملا لموظفى الضرائب العقارية على مستوى الجمهورية يوم الثلاثاء 11/8/2009.
على الله توكلنا و الله ولى التوفيق
النقابة العامة للعاملين بالضرائب العقارية

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