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Egypt
Egypt: Strike wave throughout public and private sector
By Jean Shaoul
4 March 2008
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The wave of industrial action that started more than a year
ago among Egypts textile workers is continuing to escalate,
involving ever-wider layers of workers who are demanding wage
rises to compensate for the skyrocketing cost of living.
Such struggles were previously fragmented and confined to state-owned
industries and the public sector. They have now affected the private
sector and coalesced into the biggest wave of industrial militancy
since the late 1940s and early 1950s.
Workers are raising national and political demands. Thousands
of textile workers at the Ghazl al-Malhalla factory north of Cairo
have called for the national minimum wage to be raised to US$218
a month and are acting independently of trade union leaders, who
are widely reviled.
Egypt is the largest and most industrialised country in the
Arab world. It outlaws all strikes, unless they are sanctioned
by the government-controlled General Federation of Egyptian Trade
Unions (ETUF), brutally and bloodily suppresses all demonstrations
that do not serve the interests of the military and financial
elite, and has instituted a raft of market reforms.
The strike wave began in 2006 when, according to the Egyptian
daily al Masri al Yaum, there were 222 sit-ins, strikes,
stoppages, hunger strikes and demonstrations.
One of the most important was a strike by workers in one of
the state-owned plants in the textile industry, Egypts largest
and most important exporting industry, in Malhalla, north of Cairo.
With dozens of other factories also on strike, the governmentunusuallyconceded
most of their demands in an attempt to smooth the way for the
privatisation of the industry and head off broader industrial
unrest.
The concessions had the exact opposite effect, sparking an
unprecedented wave of industrial action throughout 2007. At least
300 disputes involved more than 150,000 workers. In the first
five months of 2007, al Masri al Yaum reported a new labour
action almost every day, encompassing not just textile workers
but those in the cement industry, construction and manufacturing,
garbage collectors, bakers, food processors and Cairo subway workers,
among others.
By far the largest number of strikes27,000was in
the state textile industry. Most of these actions have been organised
by the workers themselves, with the ETUF repeatedly collaborating
openly with the government. Spinning and Weaving Syndicate union
leader Said el-Gohary even accused strikers at the Misr Shebin
Al-Kom Spinning and Weaving Company, of being terrorists
who want to sabotage the company. Textile workers at Malhalla
have sought to impeach their leaders and build a new union.
More recently, there have been strikes, sit-ins and protests
by tax collectors; workers in the textile, cement, electricity
and healthcare sectors; street cleaners; and tunnel workers. There
have been protests against rent hikes and water and electricity
shortages. Just last month, doctors staged a sit-in in front of
the Peoples Assembly prior to a national strike on March
15 for higher wages and better working conditions.
Market reforms
The strikes have been fuelled by the governments market
reforms, carried out by the wing of the ruling party led by President
Hosni Mubaraks son, Gamal, a former banker who is being
groomed to succeed his father.
The government has removed barriers to inward investment, established
Qualified Investment Zones (QIZs), sought investment from China,
offered concessionary trade deals, cut taxes and regulations on
industry, privatised dozens of state-owned enterprises, and promoted
Egypt as an export hub to Europe, the Middle East and Africa on
the basis of cheap labour and electricity.
Some indication of the scale of the governments neo-liberal
reforms can be seen from Egypts ranking as number one in
terms of investor-friendly reforms in last years World Banks
Doing Business Report. The Egyptian economy has grown 7
percent a year for the last three years, and inward investment
grew by more than US$11.1 billion in the last financial year.
QIZs were set up to meet the threat posed to Egypt by the World
Trade Organisations requirement to end the multi-fibre agreement
and liberalise the trade in textiles, and by Chinas exports
that would have led to the closure of more than half of Egypts
textiles factories, which had been in decline for some time.
Egypt signed a QIZ agreement with the US, as well as with Israel.
This allows manufacturers to export goods made in QIZs to the
US on a tariff-free basis as long as they use a certain percentagenow
about 10.5 percentof Israeli goods, thereby locking Egypt
into its 1978 peace treaty with Israel, which is deeply unpopular
with the Egyptian people.
But with the US being Egypts biggest market for its cotton
and clothing exports, and US tariffs on such goods as high as
35 percent, the agreement puts Egyptian products at a major price
advantage. While small in relation to leading textile exporters,
this has boosted Egyptian cotton exports to the US to 60 percent,
up from 45 percent before the agreement. As yet, QIZs have not
affected other industries, although the food sector has taken
advantage of the agreement to set up factories.
Grants of 80 million euros have also come from the European
Union for the restructuring of Egypts spinning industry
and for investment in advanced machinery and new equipment to
expand production and improve quality.
According to the Financial Times, around 204 companies
have taken advantage of the QIZ agreement, including 15 companies
from Turkey, India, China and Taiwan.
Federation of Egyptian Industry statistics show that there
are now 4,250 weaving, textile and apparel manufacturers in Egypt,
whose production accounts for 26 percent of industrial revenues
and 24 percent of industrial exports.
The QIZs have forced factories outside the zones to cut their
costs, above all wages, to compete with those exempt from customs
duties.
The recent economic expansion, particularly in the textile
and construction sectors, has led to a major shortage of skilled
workers. In part, this is because young workers traditionally
preferred to work in the public sector, which offered greater
job security, and in part because of appallingly low wages. Officially,
the average monthly salary in the textile industry is between
US$100 and US$120 a month, but the reality is that most workers
earn around US$50 to US$90. According to Magdi Tolba, chairman
of the Readymade Garments Exports Council, despite Egypts
high unemployment there is a current shortage of 200,000 people
and a need for a further 300,000 in the next three years.
Economic and social polarisation
While the Egyptian economy has grown at an unprecedented rate
in the last few years, this has benefited only the financial and
military elite. According to World Bank figures, official unemployment,
always a pale reflection of actual unemployment or underemployment,
has fallen to 9 percent. But rates of absolute poverty rose from
16.7 percent in 2000 to 19.6 percent in 2005 as wages have fallen
behind inflation.
The currency was devalued in 2001 and floated in 2004, increasing
import prices. State-subsidised petrol and fuel prices have risen
by more than 30 percent. This, along with the impact of avian
flu, which has severely affected Egypt, and rising food prices,
has stoked inflation. Running at about 10 percent a year for several
years, inflation hit 12.8 percent last March before falling back
to 8 percent, and has had a devastating impact on living conditions.
With Egypts 80 million population rising by 2 percent
a year and expected to rise by 21 million in the next 15 years,
there is an acute shortage of low-cost housing. Wages are barely
enough to cover rent. Property prices, fuelled by inward investment,
have soared. Poor Egyptians have long evaded the housing shortage
by building illegally in the slums and on the roofs of apartment
blocks, while the construction companies openly flout the regulations,
leading to last Decembers tragedyonly one of manyof
an apartment block collapse in Alexandria that killed 35 people.
A study published last June estimated that one in five Egyptians
does not have the income to meet the most basic needs. One minister
estimated that 75 percent of Egypts people were not feeling
the benefits of economic growth. Youssef Boutros Ghali, the finance
minister, told a conference of investors that the situation confronting
the poor was a basic challenge that keeps me awake at night.
Nader Fergany, author of the Arab Human Development Report
from 2002 to 2005, said, We have returned this country to
what it used to be called before the 1952 revolution [by the Free
Officers Movement that overthrew the monarchy]: the one percent
society. One per cent controls almost all the wealth of the country.
Political unrest
The strikes and protests have also been fuelled by political
considerations. There is deep-seated anger at the corruption and
ever-growing wealth of the ruling elite and the police brutality,
human rights abuses, press censorship and political suppression
that have played such a crucial role in the impoverishment of
the mass of the Egyptian people.
Human Rights Watch, the New York-based human rights organisation,
concluded in its most recent report on Egypt that torture was
practised systematically in every place of detention in every
part of the country from Alexandria to Aswan.
There were countless prosecutions of journalists last year.
In the last 14 months, opposition to the regime has surfaced on
the Internet, where evidence of torture and abuse led to the unprecedented
arrest and conviction of two police officers. The government has
responded by arresting and imprisoning bloggers.
Egypts dependence upon and support for Washington and
the US occupation of Iraq and Israeli suppression of the Palestinians
have galvanised anti-American feeling and loathing for Mubaraks
military-backed regime.
In January, the Gaza breakout created a grave political crisis
for the Egyptian regime. While Mubarak has long policed the border
with Gaza on behalf of Jerusalem and Washington, he did not want
to be seen as directly aiding Israel against the desperate Palestinians
who lacked food and basic provisions due to the Israeli blockade.
But he feared that Palestinian militants from Hamas would move
into Egypt and link up with their sister party, the Muslim Brotherhood,
the main semi-legal opposition in Egypt, and that many undocumented
Palestinians would make their home there, thereby exacerbating
the already tense social relations within Egypt.
It also raised the possibility of attacks on Israel launched
from the Sinai desert, which would endanger Egypts increasingly
fragile and unpopular relations with Israel. These considerations
led Mubarak, after a few days of prevarication, to reseal the
border, making it clear to everyone that he was totally dependent
on and subservient to Jerusalem and Washington. Foreign Minister
Ahmed Aboul-Gheit said, Egypt wont allow the border
to be breached a second time. Anyone approaching the border will
have his legs broken.
The government has accused the Muslim Brotherhood of organising
the strikes. But as the groups leadership comes from the
business and middle class and the Brotherhood has always opposed
the organised working class, this is only a pretext to lock up
the opposition. Dozens of Brotherhood students have been arrested,
and 40 members of the Brotherhood are currently awaiting the outcome
of a military trial for money laundering and financing the
activities of a banned group.
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