From: Suzanne Adely [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, July 16, 2012 6:54 AM



Suzanne
<http://www.facebook.com/n/?events%2F334927466581462%2Fpermalink%2F341898692
551006%2F&mid=66e1a0fG4e0c2631G3fe996aGe5&bcode=JvGfBWy8_1.1342446818.AaS8GT
8TNJ9Do7r6&n_m=epearlag%40earthlink.net> Adely posted in WHY EGYPT MATTERS:
IMPORTANT REPORT BACK FROM EGYPT's REVOLUTION
 
<http://www.facebook.com/n/?profile.php&id=586712482&mid=66e1a0fG4e0c2631G3f
e996aGe5&bcode=JvGfBWy8_1.1342446818.AaS8GT8TNJ9Do7r6&n_m=epearlag%40earthli
nk.net> "Mahalla brings the hope again, correcting the...        
Suzanne
<http://www.facebook.com/n/?profile.php&id=586712482&mid=66e1a0fG4e0c2631G3f
e996aGe5&bcode=JvGfBWy8_1.1342446818.AaS8GT8TNJ9Do7r6&n_m=epearlag%40earthli
nk.net> Adely    6:53am Jul 16  
"Mahalla brings the hope again, correcting the path of the revolution
towards a battle of class polarization. So, it wasn't a surprise to monitor
a wave of strikes prevail all of the textile sector in Egypt in less than an
hour after Mahalla strike began, including factories in many other
governorates such as Tanta, Sharqyah and Alexandria. As well as, other
sectors like electricity service, doctors, Metro workers, constructions,
cement factories, fishermen and real estate tax employees have joined the
action."

http://www.counterfire.org/index.php/articles/international/15901-the-egypti
an-revolution-mahalla-is-leading-again
<http://www.facebook.com/l/7AQHQUuei/www.counterfire.org/index.php/articles/
international/15901-the-egyptian-revolution-mahalla-is-leading-again> 
 
<http://www.facebook.com/l/tAQFvcHK_AQHY_LsrfthfmHNUnioZMKly6_j1L4IMDqKr9g/w
ww.counterfire.org/index.php/articles/international/15901-the-egyptian-revol
ution-mahalla-is-leading-again>          The
<http://www.facebook.com/l/UAQHFzCmxAQHq-FVIgytzCmlMKHtJVt0AwTJwC5DqtbfYQg/w
ww.counterfire.org/index.php/articles/international/15901-the-egyptian-revol
ution-mahalla-is-leading-again> Egyptian revolution: Mahalla is leading
again
<http://www.facebook.com/l/UAQHFzCmxAQHq-FVIgytzCmlMKHtJVt0AwTJwC5DqtbfYQg/w
ww.counterfire.org/index.php/articles/international/15901-the-egyptian-revol
ution-mahalla-is-leading-again> 

www.counterfire.org     
Mohamed Atef reports from Cairo on the return of the Mahalla textile workers
to the front line of th...
 
<http://www.facebook.com/email_open_log_pic.php?mid=66e1a0fG4e0c2631G3fe996a
Ge5> 


http://www.counterfire.org/index.php/articles/international/15901-the-egypti
an-revolution-mahalla-is-leading-again
 
 
<http://www.counterfire.org/index.php/articles/international/15901-the-egypt
ian-revolution-mahalla-is-leading-again> The Egyptian revolution: Mahalla
leads again
 
by Mohamed Atef 
 Counterfire: Sunday, 15 July 2012   

Mohamed Atef reports from Cairo on the return of the Mahalla textile workers
to the front line of the struggle


More than 20000 workers in Mahalla are now in an open-ended sit-in
escalating the strike against the corrupted management and demanding greater
share in profits.

  <http://www.counterfire.org/images/stories/aug2011/mahalla_strike.jpg> 

Some 300 workers are guarding the factory in a tent camp inside the factory.
If the management do not meet the demands workers they will start mass
rallies in the city and call for solidarity from their relatives and
neighbours.

Workers' demands include increased production incentive and to get the
equivalent two months for each year spent in the service at retirement.
Moreover, in addition they are calling for an adequate minimum wage of 1500
EGP and the development of the development of the Company's hospital.

The workers' demands are not only concentrating on their own interests, but
also aim at the reconstruction of textile industry in Egypt by injecting
investment into the company, and purging the holding company of corruption.

A statement were issued by the strike entitled "A Message To The President.
I Need My Living" said that "The workers suffered greatly from the
marginalization, poverty and humiliation over many decades. So workers must
now be now in the first concerns of the President, because all that matters
to workers is to achieve the goals of the revolution which are: a living,
freedom and social justice. We would like to remind the President that it
was the workers who are toppled the oppressive toppled regime".

Mahalla's message for President Morsi is very clear, showing that the
Egyptian workers focus on the social and economic demands of the revolution,
and he cannot pretend the revolution is ongoing so when their social and
economic rights are not met yet.

Mahalla's strike came like a breath of clean air in fevered atmosphere of
the difficulties that have faced the revolution. Recent attention has been
on the superstructural issues such as the constitution and the elections.
This strike will help shift it from issues affecting the political future to
those affecting the broad base of the poor and the marginalized. It will
help move the focus from the religious/secular polarization that has
dominated the electoral period.

Mahalla brings the hope again, correcting the path of the revolution towards
a battle of class polarization. So, it wasn't a surprise to monitor a wave
of strikes prevail all of the textile sector in Egypt in less than an hour
after Mahalla strike began, including factories in many other governorates
such as Tanta, Sharqyah and Alexandria. As well as, other sectors like
electricity service, doctors, Metro workers, constructions, cement
factories, fishermen and real estate tax employees have joined the action.

Under a impact of the action by the Egyptian workers, many political forces
and trade unions are now chanting "Long Live the Workers Movement Struggle!"
The Socialist People's Alliance Party, the Egyptian Socialist Party, The
Revolutionary Socialist, The Free Trade Union Of The Egyptian Workers and
many other bodies issued statement in solidarity with Mahalla and the
Egyptian workers.

The Egyptian workers proved today that their revolution is ongoing, by real
struggle, by militant persistence. The question now is can Leftists in Egypt
prove by joint struggle that they will be a strong engine in the process of
the revolution's continuation? We are all a waiting for the answer.

  _____  

 
http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/1226803--hillary-clinton-motorcade
-pelted-with-tomatoes-shoes-in-egypt

Hillary Clinton motorcade pelted with tomatoes, shoes in Egypt

Arshad Mohammed and Marwa Awad
Reuters: Sunday July 15, 2012
 
 CAIRO-Protesters threw tomatoes and shoes at U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton's motorcade on Sunday during her first visit to Egypt since
the election of Islamist President Mohamed Mursi.

A tomato struck an Egyptian official in the face, and shoes and a water
bottle landed near the armoured cars carrying Clinton's delegation in the
port city of Alexandria.

A senior State Department official said that neither Clinton nor her
vehicle, which were around the corner from the incident, were struck by any
of the projectiles.

Protesters chanted: "Monica, Monica," a reference to former president Bill
Clinton's extramarital affair in the mid-1990s. Some chanted "leave,
Clinton," Egyptian security officials said.

READ MORE: Arab Awakening  <http://arabawakenings.thestar.com/> coverage

It was not clear who the protesters were or what political affiliations they
might have. Protesters outside Clinton's hotel on Saturday night chanted
anti-Islamist slogans, accusing the United States of backing the Muslim
Brotherhood's rise to power.

The assault on her motorcade came on a day Clinton spoke
<http://arabawakenings.thestar.com/article/1226572-clinton-urges-egypt-s-mor
si-to-start-dialogue-with-military-to-preserve-democratic-transition>  at
the newly reopened U.S. consulate in Alexandria, addressing accusations that
the United States, which had long supported former president Hosni Mubarak,
of backing one faction or another in Egypt following his ouster last year.

"I want to be clear that the United States is not in the business, in Egypt,
of choosing winners and losers, even if we could, which of course we
cannot," Clinton said.

Clinton also met the country's top general, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi,
on Sunday to discuss Egypt's turbulent democratic transition as the military
wrestles for influence with the new president.

The meeting came a day after she met
<http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/1226572> Mursi, whose powers were
clipped by the military days before he took office.

Mursi fired back by reinstating the Islamist-dominated parliament that the
army leadership had disbanded after a court declared it void, which
intensified the standoff before the new leader even had time to form a
government.

The result has been political uncertainty as the various power centres try
to find a way to get along in a country that still has no permanent
constitution, parliament or government more than a year after Mubarak's
downfall.

In their hour-long meeting, Clinton and Tantawi discussed Egypt's political
transition and the military's "ongoing dialogue with President Mursi," a
U.S. official travelling with Clinton said in an email brief.

"Tantawi stressed that this is what Egyptians need most now - help getting
the economy back on track," the official said.

Clinton "stressed the importance of protecting the rights of all Egyptians,
including women and minorities."

The talks also touched on the increasingly lawless Sinai region and the
Israeli-Palestinian peace process.

Speaking after the meeting, Tantawi said the army respected the presidency
but would not be deterred from its role of "protecting" Egypt.

"The armed forces and the army council respects legislative and executive
authorities," he said in a speech to troops in the city of Ismailia. "The
armed forces would not allow anyone to discourage it from its role in
protecting Egypt and its people."

Ties with the United States, which provides Egypt with an annual $1.3
billion in military aid, were strained this year when Egyptian judicial
police raided the offices of several U.S.-backed non-governmental
organizations on suspicion of illegal foreign funding and put several
Americans on trial.

The spat ended when Egyptian authorities allowed the U.S. citizens and other
foreign workers to leave the country.

During her speech, Clinton said: "When we talk about supporting democracy,
we mean real democracy."

"To us real democracy means that every citizen has the right to live, work
and worship as they choose, whether they are man or woman, Christian or
Muslim."

"Real democracy means that no group or faction or leader can impose their
will, their ideology, their religion, their desires on anyone else."

That was a message she is likely to have repeated in meetings on Sunday with
women and Christians, both groups that fear their rights may be curtailed
under a Muslim Brotherhood-dominated government.



  _____  

 

 
  _____  

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