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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: workers

Public transportation workers on strike إضراب عمال النقل العام

Posted on 02/05/200715/01/2021 By 3arabawy

I’m receiving news that 3000 public transportation workers are on strike in Cairo. They include bus drivers, ticket collectors, maintenance workers in the stations of Nasr and Fateh, located in my neighborhood Nasr City, east of the capital.

I’ll post more details soon.

UPDATE: The Sixth District of Nasr City has turned into a military zone, with heavy police deployments. The strikers are under siege. No photographers or reporters are allowed in. The strikers number something between 2000 and 3000. The workers are demanding raising their ridiculously low salaries (you can work for 10 years, and your basic salary won’t exceed LE500). They are also demanding a corruption investigation into their housing society, especially with the existence of 26 emergency cases of workers without houses. The strikers are also demanding equality in food allowances. While the driver receives LE100 a month, the ticket collector receives LE55, and the maintenance worker gets LE20!! The strikers are demanding the food allowance to be raised more than LE100 and to be paid equally to everybody.

The strikers, in addition, want an increase in their percentage of the bus tickets sales. The workers get 2.5% of the value of the sold ticket. They want to increase this to 10%.

The workers are also protesting their treatment when they get transferred from their jobs due to medical reasons. The government cuts down their bonuses from LE300 to LE70!

The workers have occupied the two stations (Nasr and Fateh), which have 149 buses. The government managed only to bring out less than 40. The rest are under the workers’ control.

The public transportation workers in Sawwah and Giza have not joined the strike yet, but my sources say they are following closely what’s happening in Nasr City, and there’s a possibility the industrial action will spread.

Could that be another 1976? Back then, public transportation workers launched a national strike, one day after Sadat was declared president by 99% in a sham referendum. This paved the road to the January 1977 Bread Intifada.

UPDATE: It’s 10pm now. The strike continues in Nasr and Fateh stations… but no information is available yet if anything happened in the other stations in Cairo or Giza. I was told the chief of the Public Transport Authorities arrived in person to negotiate with the strikers. He asked them to suspend the strike, and promised their demads will be met in July with the start of the new financial year. The workers refused, and are still sitting in.

Mansoura-España Updates

Posted on 01/05/200707/02/2021 By 3arabawy

The textile strike at Mansoura-España Company, in the Nile Delta province of Daqahliya, continues.

On the so-called Free Union of Egyptian Workers

Posted on 01/05/200712/06/2012 By 3arabawy

Happy May Day ya shabab…

I received some queries from friends and readers about the “Free Union of Egyptian Workers,” announced by Al-Masry Al-Youm, which is supposedly holding a May Day “symbolic” protest in Tahrir Sq. today and in “15 other provinces,” according to the paper’s report. (UPDATE NOV07: The hyperlink is pointing to another article now. I’m gonna try to locate the original article again online)

I don’t know if I should laugh or cry over Al-Masry Al-Youm’s sensationalist headlines… 15 provinces?! A national union?! I know a couple of activists who are involved in this project, and indeed “symbolic” action will be the best they can get. Despite my sincere wishes for their success, I’m afraid they do not have grass-root support. And there’s no way in hell they could organize (even “symbolic”) protests in 15 provinces.

Free and parallel associations can NOT parachute in from above. You do not announce a national labor union, and then descend on the working class opening the door for membership, expecting the workers will flock in. It works the other way around: You start establishing local union committees in a factory, two or three, and then you evolve into a national structure.

There are currently several initiatives (other than the elitist one mentioned above) in activist and labor circles about how to take the movement forward. I’ll try to post something about them in the near future.

More later…

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