Skip to content
3arabawy
3arabawy

Hossam el-Hamalawy

  • Home
  • About
  • Archive
  • Blog
  • Photos
  • Books
3arabawy

Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: workers

An appeal to the German trade unions and rights activists

Posted on 01/08/200803/03/2021 By 3arabawy

To our comrades, brothers and sisters in Germany,

The US-backed regime of Hosni Mubarak is prosecuting 49 Egyptians in the Emergency High State Security Criminal Court. It is accusing them of involvement in the recent two day uprising in the Nile Delta town of Mahalla. The Egyptian security forces occupied Ghazl el-Mahalla, the biggest textile mill in the Middle East with 27,000 workers, on the 6th of April, attempting to crush a strike in protest against skyrocketing food prices. The workers also demanded a raise in the national minimum wage, which has remained stagnant since 1984. The strike was organized by the Textile Workers’ League, an independent association formed last year following a wave of successful textile workers’ occupations.

The association called the strike on 6 April. The regime responded by flooding the Nile Delta town with thousands of troops. They surrounded and occupied the textile factory compound, and rounded up a number of the Textile Workers’ League activists. This move triggered a mass demonstration that drew in workers and the urban poor from the town. Protesters fought back when security forces attacked demonstrators with batons, tear gas, water cannons, rubber bullets and live ammunition.

At least three people were killed and hundreds injured. Police then swooped on neighborhoods and arrested hundreds of Mahalla citizens. Many of these activists were released following international pressure, but 43 ordinary people swept up in the crackdown are still in jail.

Detainees who were released shortly afterward spoke of horrific torture meted out to them in police stations and state security facilities.

These included severe beatings, electric shocks and sexual abuse. Prisoners were forced to sleep on the floor and threatened with rape. On several occasions security forces personnel trampled over the detainees as they lay helpless on the ground.

The detainees have found themselves trapped in a maze of laws and prisons. State security agents have ignored orders from the prosecutor’s office to release some of the prisoners.
Others who had made it out of the detention facilities were either kidnapped or rearrested under wide-ranging security powers.

Mubarak’s regime has decided to transfer 43 of the detainees to an exceptional court, opening on 9th of August – which has been denounced by human rights groups as lacking the international standards for a “safe and just trial”.

Six others are on the run and will be tried in absentia.

All the detainees will be tried on trumped up charges and face prison sentences of between six to ten years hard labor.

Egyptian activists have denounced the regime for using the detainees as scapegoats for the uprising.

International solidarity with the Mahalla detainees is urgently needed. Statements of support from German trade unions and human rights groups, as well protests in front of the regime’s embassies and consulates, will help put pressure on the Egyptian dictatorship, which is a trading partner with the German state.

1-The Center for Socialist Studies
2-Workers For Change Movement
3-The Mahalla Textile Workers’ League

1917 Bolsheviks

Posted on 01/08/200808/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Workers loading bundles of the Bolshevik daily Pravda for distribution, following the outbreak of the 1917 Russian Revolution [Photo courtesy of the UK Socialist Worker Archives]

Nile Cotton Ginning Company workers end strike on condition that demands be discussed

Posted on 01/08/200808/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Sarah Carr reports:

Workers from the Nile Cotton Ginning Company Thursday called off a strike they began in protest at the decision of company management not to pay bonuses to which workers claim they are entitled.
Workers ended the strike when they received a promise that a meeting of People’s Assembly representatives from the Gharbeia governorate and government representatives will be convened to discuss workers’ demands on Aug. 10.
The Nile Company, which was privatized in 1997, has factories in the governorates of Gharbeia and Minya.
Some 1,000 workers are employed in the Minya factory.
“Workers’ basic pay is between LE 270 and LE 450 per month,” a worker from Nile Company’s Mahalla factory, who has been employed there for 22 years and who preferred to remain anonymous, told Daily News Egypt.
“When they privatized the factory we carried on working but we cannot stay silent when they interfere with our basic entitlements,” he continued.
Workers say that company management has refused to pay them a 10 percent salary increase laid down in a 2003 law, as well as another seven percent pay increase.
The Masrawy website quotes Nile Company worker Abdallah Muhammad as saying that “this factory used to produce gold, but that’s been turned to ruins by the administration which doesn’t care about anything apart from paying its debts.”
Muhammad alleges that the company’s administration is gradually dissembling the cotton ginning machines and using factory assets to take out loans.
He says that this allows banks to take control of these assets, sell them and divide up the land on which the factories are located.
Source in the Mahalla factory confirmed this report.
“The investors who bought the company have no background in cotton and are not interested in it in the first place,” he said.
“Their interest is the land on which the factories stand, which is in a prime location and extremely expensive — it can reach between LE 10,000 and LE 15,000 per square meter,” he continued.

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 279
  • 280
  • 281
  • …
  • 484
  • Next

Search 3arabawy

Follow 3arabawy

  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • Bluesky
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Spotify
©2026 3arabawy