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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: workers

Egyptian doctors threatening to strike

Posted on 04/03/200810/02/2021 By 3arabawy

From the Los Angeles Times…

Enter the lounge in the Nile Hospital, take a seat on a ripped leather couch, brush away the cigarette smoke and listen to a litany of complaints on the cruel economics of healthcare from doctors whose salaries are as low as $63 a month and who live with their parents.The travails of doctors mirror the larger shortcomings of a government struggling to provide medical care in a country where about 45% of the population lives in poverty. Physicians across the nation complain of long hours, shrinking respect for their profession, lack of medicine and broken equipment. One gynecologist said his public hospital is so broke that he buys his own rubber gloves rather than wearing ones that have been washed for reuse.

“You get 10 extra pounds [about $1.80] if you work a 24-hour shift,” said Mohammed Farahat, an orthopedic specialist. “But to buy your dinner during that shift costs you 15 pounds. So you’re thinking, what good does it do?”

Egypt’s doctors have been protesting for weeks and have set a March deadline for a nationwide strike. Their battle is the latest ripple of labor unrest that in recent months has sparked demonstrations by textile workers, university professors, pharmacists, train conductors and real estate tax collectors. High inflation, flat wages and anger at the government of President Hosni Mubarak are increasingly agitating both the educated and working classes in a moderate Arab state that is one of America’s closest Middle East allies.

The Doctors Union is demanding an immediate minimum monthly salary of 1,000 pounds or about $180 for the 93,000 physicians working directly for the state. No salary at the Nile Hospital in northwest Cairo exceeds that, including the pay for surgeons, Farahat said.

The starting monthly pay for doctors can be as low as $23. The Egyptian Health Ministry said that it would gradually increase pay based on performance, but that its budget, like those of many government agencies, is too strapped to meet the union’s demands.

“We sympathize with doctors,” said Abdel Rahman Shahin, a ministry spokesman. “The state should finance [higher pay], but the state has a lot of obligations.” He added that with phased-in performance bonuses “at least there is some change doctors will feel” by the end of the year.

Many doctors view the proposal as a paltry attempt to correct years of low salaries that are now quickly eaten up by a surge in inflation that has increased prices as much as 50% for food and other commodities over the last two years. The crisis has also reminded doctors that despite years of education and training, their average salaries are slightly higher than that of government accountants, who earn about $35 a month, and less than many university professors.

“Life is very difficult, but people expect you, as a doctor, to have a car, spend generously and leave huge tips,” said Ahmad Sobhi, an internist at Nile Hospital who earns less than $65 a month. “The reality is my small salary. My wife and I and our new daughter live in an apartment owned by my father. We never go to the movies. Our only entertainment is to watch TV.”

That description fits thousands of Egyptian doctors, many of whom vent their anxiety on a blog sponsored by Doctors Without Rights, a lobbying group founded in 2007.

A post filed by Dr. Ali Said reads: “An inspector from the municipality has passed by our hospital today. All he cared to check was whether we had trees or not. You tell inspectors, ‘There is a shortage in equipment.’ They tell you, ‘There is no money for this nonsense.’ . . . Have you ever heard of anything like this in any other part of the world?”

The physicians’ stature and sense of professional entitlement have been tested by a state healthcare system burdened by bureaucracy and debt. Most doctors moonlight by rotating shifts at different hospitals and private clinics. This accumulates into strings of sleepless nights but can earn doctors an extra $90 a month. Many leave Egypt for richer Persian Gulf oil countries, where hospital salaries are many times higher.

“This is causing a brain drain,” said Farahat, who sat puffy-eyed in scrubs and a lab coat. “I have doctor friends who have moved abroad and I’m thinking of going to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait or the United Arab Emirates. The problem is that in 10 to 15 years, if all the doctors leave, there will be no one left to teach a younger generation of Egyptian physicians.”

It is a sensitive time for doctors to be contemplating a strike. Mubarak and his ruling National Democratic Party are under pressure from labor groups demanding better wages and from opposition organizations, such as the Muslim Brotherhood, pushing for political reforms. Calls for change have highlighted the widening anger the poor have for an upper class they regard as corrupt and aloof to the nation’s problems.

The Doctors Union has a history of involvement with the Muslim Brotherhood, which wants Egypt governed by Islamic law and has seen hundreds of members arrested by security forces seeking to limit the group’s chances in upcoming local elections. The doctors have been careful in recent demonstrations not to let their cause for higher salaries be subsumed into a wider and more dangerous political debate.

But many physicians feel that, although they still command a degree of respect in society, they are part of a vanishing middle class. “We have two classes today in Egypt — the capitalists and the poor,” Farahat said. “We have no middle class anymore. Given such conditions, there must be labor strikes.”

His colleague, Mohammed Sayed, an orthopedic specialist, agreed. “Five years ago a strike by doctors would have been unthinkable,” he said. “Overall, the economy is doing well, but the money is not getting to the people. It’s going to the elite. In the 1960s and 1970s, Egypt had rich people but they were self-made, the sons of farmers who came from the Nile Delta. Today, the rich come from the rich class; they’ve done nothing to work for it. We are asking for a reasonable demand of 1,000 pounds a month.”

The Egyptian government’s underfunding of healthcare has created a public system in which the poor are forced to pay for medications, sutures and other items that would normally be covered by subsidies. The nation’s healthcare system is divided into public and private institutions, but most hospital beds are funded by the state. Inflation and supply shortages prevent patients from filling prescriptions, resulting in extended illnesses and longer recovery times.

“We face difficulties in serving patients because public healthcare is, in effect, being privatized in a ruthless way,” said Said Sayed, a spokesman for the Doctors Union, which represents Egypt’s 167,000 physicians. “We cannot serve the poor patient in public hospitals.”
Mohammed Sayed, a husky, congenial man, said he works a number of 24-hour shifts a month, which earns him an extra $10. Even before the rapid rise in inflation, he said, that was a maddeningly low sum.

His friend, Mohammed Wael Saad, a surgeon at Nile Hospital, said most Egyptians view doctors as singularly altruistic and find it odd that they would consider striking over financial matters.
“People think we are beyond money. But how can we live?” said Saad. “How can I give the best when I work long hours and earn as much as a nurse or a mill worker? Our salaries need to be commensurate with prosecutors’. They earn 2,000 pounds [about $365] a month. So, is it more important to put someone in jail or to save someone from dying?”

Suez Education Ministry civil servants and workers stage sit-in

Posted on 04/03/200825/03/2015 By 3arabawy

Hundreds of Ministry of Education civil servants and workers protested in Suez, demanding employment reforms and salaries’ raise.

Police abort Mahalla protest

Posted on 04/03/200813/01/2021 By 3arabawy

There are conflicting reports surfing the web over the Monday Mahalla pro-Gaza protest. You will find a blog that says the protest never took place and it was a “rumor,” while there’s an Arabic report from the Spanish newswire agency that speaks of a silent march.

Neither are true. Labor organizers did mobilize for a demonstration, but it was aborted by the police. The workers started assembling inside the company around 3:30pm after the end of the first work shift, but came under the assault of the police, whose troops confiscated the banners that they had, and threatened a showdown, so the organizers decided to disband the protest around 4pm.

The estimates of those who assembled varied from 2000 to 5ooo. I hope when fellow journalists contact the organizers they know in the factory that they cross check their facts with more than one source.

Another misreporting is the currently circulated Egyptian Workers and Trade Unions Watch report that speaks of the establishment of the first independent labor union in Egypt outside the state-backed General Federation of Trade Union’s body, by the leaders of the Real Estate Tax Collectors’ Strike.

Kamal Abu Eita and other members of the Higher Committee for the Real Estate Tax Collectors' Strike كمال أبوعيطة وبعض أعضاء اللجنة العليا للإضراب

This report was circulated last month, and claimed the union was born on 18 February, and gave a detailed structure for it. I refused to post it then (and will not post it now), because it was wrong. The EWTUW’s reports in general are correct, and I post them here, but I always cross check what they say with other sources, and this report, again, was wrong. A meeting indeed took place on 18 Feb between the members and Higher Committee for the Real Estate Tax Collectors’ Strike on that day. The project to launch an independent union was discussed, and proposals were floated around, where basically the Higher Committee was to bypass the corrupt, state-backed union members and establish itself, rightfully, as the real representative of the 55,000 tax collectors, who went on a national strike last year and occupied downtown Cairo. The union was not announced that evening however, but a decision was taken to maintain the Higher Committee, which was founded last year to lead the strike, and not disband it following the victory… What the EWTUW did was that it took the proposal and published it, misreporting that it was an “announcement” not a “proposal.”

Yesterday the same report was posted on one of the labor blogs. But again, it is not true that the union has been born yet. Members of the Higher Committee have been giving statements saying “they will” lead that new fight to establish the union. They are still speaking in the future tense, and not the present tense. I know there are many who are impatient to see this, including myself, but we have to be accurate in our reporting. (I contacted the blogger who reposted the report and he indeed admitted it was a misunderstanding of some of Kamal Abu Eita’s latest statements, and he promised me to take it down.. and he did.) There is no doubt the Higher Committee is running the show now and have completely sidelined the govt-backed Federation officials. (What can be more of a humiliating proof for the latter than being not present during the final negotiations between the strike leaders and the Finance Minister? They were standing outside in the street suntanning, while the Higher Committee members were grilling the minister inside the building, and came out carried on the shoulders after the declaration of victory.) But this is one thing, and announcing a parallel labor union officially (which means an official declaration of war on the Federation) is another.

Also on the point of misreporting the industrial action in general: I don’t know if you’ve noticed or not, but I haven’t been linking to Al-Masry Al-Youm recently that much when it comes to labor coverage. That’s unfortunately because the paper is covering the issue too sensationally. Sometimes “sit-ins” are reported as “strikes,” on other occasions they inflated the numbers of the participant strikers or gave room for statements by labor activists who are known for their closeness to the media outlets more than they are to their base on the factory floor. The labor coverage of Ad-Dustour and El-Badeel however is much better.

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