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Egypt
Hundreds of sit-in strikes shake Egypt
By Harvey Thompson
18 May 2007
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Around 300 mainly female workers at the Mansoura Spanish Garment
Factory in the Nile delta have occupied the plant since April
21. The workers are staging a sit-in on the firms shop floor
after a dispute with management over missed pay and the contested
sale of the company.
Workers say they are too poorly paid to meet many of their
basic needs, a problem made worse by the failure of the company
to pay them their last 17 bonuses since 1999. The workers are
also concerned that the factory may close after a recent announcement
that it was sold through a process that they condemn as lacking
transparency.
On average 200 people sleep there each night on sheets of cardboard
arranged on the floor between the sewing machines. Many women
have brought their children, some as young as four months old,
inside the plant to spend the night with them. They say they will
not go home until the factory management meets their demands.
The strikers say they remain committed to the factory occupation
despite a deal offered by Aisha Abdel Hady, the minister of manpower
and labour, on May 8. According to sources on the factory union
committee, which negotiated the offer, Hady agreed to pay the
workers one months salary out of the ministry budget in
exchange for an immediate end to the protest.
The local union committee, which supposedly represents the
employees of Mansoura Spanish, accepted the deal without consulting
them.
Upon learning the details of the offer, workers rejected it.
Initial media reports claimed that 70 percent of the protestors
had accepted the offer and ended the sit-in.
The union is not there for us, said Gamal Ramadan,
a production worker who has been employed by Mansoura Spanish
for 19 years. The union is not effective. Ideally it should
work for both the employer and the workers, but in reality it
doesnt take our side in anything. We dont know anyone
on the local committee who is on our side, they all side with
the management.
According to the Middle East Report Online, Egypt is
involved in the longest and strongest wave of worker protest
since the end of World War II.
In March, the Egyptian daily al-Masri al-Yawm estimated
that around 222 sit-in strikes, work stoppages, hunger strikes
and demonstrations had occurred during 2006. In the first five
months of 2007, the paper reported a new labour action nearly
every day. The citizen group Egyptian Workers and Trade Union
Watch documented 56 incidents during the month of April and another
15 during the first week of May.
Although the strike wave first hit the textile industry, industrial
unrest has spread to workers in the construction industry, garbage
collectors, bakers, food processing workers and Cairo subway workers,
among others.
As with the vast majority of strikes in Egypt in the past 40
years, the latest strikes are officially illegal (unauthorized
by the state-controlled General Federation of Trade Unions and
its subsidiary bodies in factories and other workplaces). But
unlike upsurges of working-class collective action in the 1980s
and 1990s, which were confined to state-owned industries, the
recent wave has also affected employees in the private sector.
The biggest labour action was in December, when around 25,000
workers went on strike at the state-owned Egypt Company for Spinning
and Weaving in the Nile Delta city of Mahalla. After three days
of industrial actionwhich reportedly cost the company around
$12 millionworkers demands for the promised bonuses
were met.
See Also:
Egypt: Wildcat strikes and
protests continue
[24 February 2007]
Egypt: Textile workers protest
trade union collaboration with employers
[12 February 2007]
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