Skip to content
3arabawy
3arabawy

Hossam el-Hamalawy

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

Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: workers

Mansoura-España worker dismissal reignites meltdown fears

Posted on 18/06/200807/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Michaela Singer reports:

Two hundred and fifty workers at the Mansoura-España garments factory in Talkha demonstrated for a second day against the dismissal of colleague Mohsen El-Shae’r.
El-Shae’r, 34, was given his marching orders after “speaking to the papers” about proposed changes to working regulations in the factory.
“I was called into the office where I was taken to task for giving quotes to newspapers, such as Al-Dostour, concerning conditions in the factory, and was told I was fired.”
By law, employees can only be fired after an investigation, which must be conducted in the presence of a member of the Labor Union board.
El-Shae’r, who has worked at the factory for 12 years, made an official complaint to the Ministry of Manpower and Immigration on Saturday, June 14.
“The company officials were ordered by the Ministry of Manpower and Immigration to retract my dismissal, as I had done nothing contrary to the law. However, they refused, saying they are prepared to go to court to fight it out.”
Yesterday, workers demonstrated outside the factory to pressure officials to backtrack on their decision. During a visit from United Bank representative Said Galal, it came to light that there was ambiguity as to the reasoning underpinning the dismissal.
United Bank is the holding company of Mansoura-España.
According to El-Shae’r, this points to attempts to stifle the demands of activist workers. “I spoke to Galal yesterday,” he said. “He didn’t know who I was and began to speak about ‘Mohsen El-Shae’r’ with apparent familiarity. Having claimed to know me personally, he said the reason I had been sacked was for agitating during a general meeting held on June 1. But this was not the reason I was given at my dismissal.”
The general meeting on June 1 took place to announce that the factory had been sold and will be taken over by executive and Member of Parliament Youssri El-Ghazali. However, a change to the working hours was also announced: current hours of 8 am to 3:30 pm were due to be changed to 8 am to 5:30 pm. A pay raise was not included.
“I strongly objected to these changes in the meeting,” explained El-Shae’r, “however, it is within my right to do so, not to mention the fact that 80 percent of workers are women, who have domestic duties and cannot practically work until 5:30 pm.”
The plans to alter working hours were subsequently reversed when workers filed an official complaint to the Labor Union. Factory officials were told to either revoke the decision or face a fine.
El-Shae’r traveled to Cairo Monday June 16 to meet with Nahed El-Ashry from the Manpower and Immigration Ministry, and company representatives from United Bank Badawi Hassanein and Mustafa Azouza.
Neither Hassanein nor Azouza showed up. It was confirmed that should they fail to attend an appointment with the workers in the next two weeks, the matter will be passed on to Manpower Minister Aisha Abdel Hadi.
However, the current demonstrations are not the only show of worker activism seen in the Mansoura-España factory in recent years.
El-Shae’r was one of six workers who had their dismissal revoked after the Mansour-España workers ‘spring offensive’ of 2007, where workers staged a long sit-in to secure wages and allowances.
According to employees and social activists, factory officials have failed to pay Labor Day allowances and annual index-linked pay rises since 1999. By spring 2007, they were failing to pay even the basic salary, which led works to stage a sit-in occupying the factory in April 2007.
Officials were claiming that the factory was sustaining losses and was under review to be liquidated.
The sit-in won the promise of factory owners that it would not be liquidated. In a General Assembly meeting for shareholders held on July 1, 2007, the holding company drastically cut share prices in what workers claim to be preparations for a quick sell.
But decisions of the July General Assembly were declared null and void by the Minister of Investment, after minority shareholders, who had not been informed of the meeting, raised court cases against Egypt United Bank on the basis that the July Assembly had to be held in Talkha to be considered valid.
Despite past victories, however, employees fear the worst.

Mohsen el-Sha'er محسن الشاعر

Mahalla testimony

Posted on 17/06/200807/02/2021 By 3arabawy

A Mahalla labor organizer involved in the April 6 Uprising…

None of us expected the events to explode in such manner on 6 April. What we were hoping for at best was to repeat what happened on 17 February on a larger scale. May be instead of 20,000, we’ll get double that.

After the round up of the (Textile Workers’ League) leaders and the occupation of the factory, all of us thought the day was over. But the citizens outside the factory were waiting. They were the real heroes of the day. They all saw what we did on 17 February. They felt what we were talking about. They were our families at the end of the day, not strangers. From the early morning many were roaming outside the company gates and waiting for us to do something. They were waiting for the strike. When the strike was aborted, they took the initiative.

It’s wrong to ignore the direct link between 17 February ‘organized’ demonstration and the April 6 ‘spontaneous’ uprising. The first was a dress rehearsal for the latter, and helped hype up the morale of the citizens in the town. If the factory had gone on strike, the events would have taken a different direction of course.

There’s anger towards the Muslim Brotherhood parliamentarian for not doing anything for the people in Mahalla. The group itself refused to support the strike and did not mobilize its supporters on that day to the streets… But at the same time, some young Muslim Brotherhood students from Mahalla and Tanta disobeyed their organizational orders the joined the protests on occasions… Yes, I assure you, they were acting without the consent of their leadership.

Mahalla testimony

Posted on 17/06/200807/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Testimony from a Mahalla labor organizer involved in the 6 April uprising:

The Textile Workers’ League activists were not invited to the meeting with Hussein Megawer (the head of the state-backed General Federation of Trade Unions and the leader of the ruling NDP parliamentary bloc). He knew they’d eat him alive if he asked them to do something like what he was going to ask from Muhammad el-Attar and his friends. Still, (Textile Workers’ League leaders) Kamal el-Fayoumi and Wael Habib rushed to Cairo as soon as they knew about the meeting, and waited for Attar and his men to show up in front of the HQ of the Federation. Attar, Habib and others were shocked and embarrassed to see them there…
As soon as everyone entered Megawer’s office, Attar tried to put on some show, only to be silenced by Megawer in a humiliating way..
“Shut up!” cried Megawer in the face Attar. “Not a single word! I want to hear only three things: We are sorry; There will not be a strike on 6 April; and production will increase on that day.” Then he handed over the delegation a ready made statement to sign, with their five names printed. The five signed, but Wael and Kamal refused. “If the workers are planning to strike on 6 April, then I’ll strike with them,” Wael said, while Kamal looked into Megawer’s eyes in challenge and said: “We are here to discuss the minimum wage. You didn’t say anything about that. We are not signing.”
Megawer lost it and started issuing threats to the Textile Workers’ League activists: “You will go behind the sun. Take my word for it.”

Below is a scanned copy of the pledge signed by Attar and his four comrades, praising the state-backed federation and general union, pledging not to strike on 6 April but to increase production, and accusing “political groups outside the factory” of trying to “stir troubles”. The statement was leaked out of Megawer’s office, and copies were distributed by the Textile Workers’ League activists in the factory in the days preceding the uprising to expose the betrayal.

خيانة إضراب 6 أبريل بالمحلة
  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 299
  • 300
  • 301
  • …
  • 484
  • Next

Search 3arabawy

Follow 3arabawy

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