--- On Tue, 26/7/11, Ranjana Padhi <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Ranjana Padhi <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: workers' struggles Egypt
To: "ranjanapadhi" <[email protected]>
Date: Tuesday, 26 July, 2011, 11:37





---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Peter Custers <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, Jul 24, 2011 at 12:58 PM
Subject: workers' struggles Egypt
To: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], 
[email protected], [email protected], [email protected], 
[email protected], [email protected], [email protected], 
[email protected], [email protected], [email protected], 
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Dear Friends,
 
Below is my latest write-up, on workers' struggles in Egypt.
In case you publish or distribute further, please do let me know.
 
With very best wishes,
 
Peter Custers












 
 
PEOPLE’S STRUGGLES IN EGYPT CONTINUING:
REPLAY OR NEW PHASE?
 
Replay of the January/February events, or exciting new phase? In the first part 
of July, Egypt saw mass mobilizations which, at first sight, might seem a 
replay of what happened in the beginning of this year. Half a year after the 
successful overthrow of the country´s hated dictator Mubarak, the country has 
witnessed another peak of protests. On July 8 and July 15, after the Friday 
prayers, people once more have gathered in huge numbers at Cairo´s Tahrir 
square, - the square that undisputedly was the epicenter of the revolt against 
Mubarak. Once again, the Egyptian public has primarily targeted the state´s 
apparatus of repression, demanding a clean-up of the police force, speedier 
trials of former Mubarak functionaries, and an end to military trials of 
civilians. And once again the country´s Military Council, which in February 
staged a coup-d‘etat and put itself in charge of the transition to 
parliamentary democracy, has sought to appease the
 protesters. Thus, the Interior Minister Mansour el-Essawy, on the eve of the 
July 15 mass rally at Tahrir square, announced ´the biggest shake-up´ in the 
history of the police. Presumably, over 6 hundred senior police officers will 
face early retirement. Yet once again, sections of the public have refuse to 
budge. Thus, in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria, thousands of people on 
July the 15th reportedly broke away from the main rally, and staged a protest 
at the police headquarters demanding the resignation of the Interior Minister 
himself! Is this a replay of the Egyptian people´s aversion against  repressive 
state rule? Or are we witnessing something new?
 
Perhaps a ´replay´ of the events which led to the revolutionary uprising 
earlier this year may not be out of place. Crucial, as is well known, was the 
role played by the April 6 Movement, the group of youngsters who successfully 
launched an appeal via internet, calling on their face-book friends to 
demonstrate.  Less known is the fact that the Cairo youngsters drew their 
organization´s name, their original inspiration, from workers of the country´s 
largest textile mill, Misr, who on April the 6th, 2008 had launched a strike. 
The face-book activists met the workers before embarking on their own campaign. 
They subsequently were to move away, or at least downplay the Misr workers´ 
social demands. Yet it is entirely just to recall that this year´s revolt was 
preceded by several, very significant waves of workers´ strikes. Samir Amin, 
the world famous economist, has termed the 2008 wave of strikes in Egypt a 
gigantic success, ´the very strongest in
 the African continent´. According to him, it resulted in concrete increases in 
wages, - of 10 to 15% on average, as well as increased scope for independent 
trade unions to operate. Again, in 2010, Egypt saw another wave of workers´ 
struggles. An important impetus reportedly was provided by a high level court 
decision. For in March that year, Egypt´s Court of Administrative Disputes 
ruled that the state, Mubarak´s state, should fix a minimum wage, - to apply to 
all publicly and privately employed salaried workers. This  triggered that 
year´s ´battle of salaries´. According to some researchers, not a single day 
passed during 2010 without ´at least three protest movements´! Most of these 
were workers´ strikes.
 
Again, whereas educated youngsters ultimately took centre-stage in mobilizing 
against the Mubarak regime, it would be wrong to belittle the contribution of 
the Egyptian working class. In fact, some Egyptian sources argue that the role 
of the working class was crucial both in Tunisia, where the Arab revolt 
started, and in Egypt. In Tunisia, the unions’ call for a general strike 
reportedly was ´decisive´. And in Egypt, the transport workers for instance 
helped paralyze the country before Mubarak agreed to step down. During the last 
days preceding the dictator´s  imposed resignation on February the 12th, calls 
for political strikes reportedly were multiplied. Outside the capital Cairo, in 
the middle-sized city of Suez for instance where the ferment was noticeable 
this July too, workers of a cement factory unleashed a political strike. Hence, 
the ´spill-over´: people´s resistance by no means ended on February the 12th. 
In fact, Mubarak´s
 resignation opened the gates. Even as the Military Council that took over the 
reins sought to contain people´s indignation, calling for an end to all social 
struggles on February the 16th   - strike struggles erupted everywhere. There 
were strikes and other protests in the sectors of petrol and gas, in steel, in 
the postal services, etc. Even members of the Cairo police went out 
demonstrating. Clearly, Mubarak´s departure by no means ended the public´s 
indignation over all injustices committed under his dictatorship. It ushered 
into a new phase of Egypt´s revolution. As if people had tasted the sweetness 
of protests!
 
Yet the clearest hint suggesting that post-February events in Egypt are not 
just a replay, is received by looking at the nature of workers´ demands. Here, 
it is fair to put the spotlights briefly on what has been happening in Egypt´s 
medium sized cities, such as Mahallah Al-Koubra, in the centre of the Nile 
Delta. Shortly after the Military Council had tried to prohibit strikes, 
workers of the Misr textile company in Mahalla planted tents in the factory 
compound, replicating the tent camp at Tahrir square! Affixing posters on the 
factory walls, they put forward their list of demands, foremost: the dismissal 
of the company´s director whom they accused of corruption. This daring action 
had more than local significance. For Misr´s workers hold an impressive record 
of opposition against company misrule. In the past, they are reported to have 
successfully pre-empted denationalization, in the period when Egypt´s military 
rulers opted to privatize many of
 the industries brought under state control under Nasser´s state socialism. 
Struggles to bring down company directors have since occurred in numerous other 
factories. Surely, the demand for wages increments which was so central back in 
2008, remains important. Surely, workers now insist that the minimum wage be 
fixed at 1200 Egyptian Pounds. They want a living wage, whereas many still have 
to survive on a quarter this amount. Yet the outcome of the February revolt has 
encouraged workers to, also, speak out in favor of democracy inside the company 
where they toil. 
 
Thus the workers´ struggles aimed at purging their factories from Mubarak´s 
cronies well confirm that Egypt´s revolution has entered a new phase. Even as 
the Military Council seeks to play a double game, of containment and 
appeasement, in an effort to turn the tide, - people are moving forward.  In 
June, the Military Council signed an agreement with the IMF,  seeking another 
thick, 3 Billion US Dollars´ loan on conventional terms. Yet many industrial 
workers are aware of the fact that the privatization policy of the past has 
induced a depression in the social level of wages, and are unconvinced. They 
want to see more economic and political changes and are speaking out. As to the 
Western powers - since the overthrow of Mubarak, their man, in February last, 
they have strenuously sought to turn the world’s attention away from Egyptian 
events.  Thus, one of NATO´s war objectives when intervening against Gaddafi in 
Libya´s civil war, has been to
 refocus the attention of the Western public away from the revolt in Egypt with 
its potentially radical implications. Meanwhile, Egypt´s workers, undisturbed 
by the fact that Cairo´s youngsters ´stole´ the initiative, have amplified the 
meaning of the battle for democracy in the Middle East. They are - so it seems 
at least - not interested in a replay, but want to bring the Arab revolt to an 
entirely new stage.
 
Dr. Peter Custers
Special European Correspondent, daily Prothom Alo, Bangladesh 
International Correspondent, The Daily Star, Bangladesh – 
Leiden, the Netherlands, July 24, 2011
www.petercusters.nl, [email protected]

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