Sacked activist finally gets his pay cheque

Ahmad el-Droubi woke up in the morning to a postman knocking on his door. When he opened the letter, it was nothing but a sweet cheque from his former employer that had his unpaid salary and consultancy fees.The cheque Droubi received this morning signifies two things: First, it is an implicit acknowledgement from his company that he was unjustly dismissed. Second, it shows campaigning does work! Yes, Droubi wouldn’t have gotten back part of his rights, if it was not for you dear readers.
On behalf of Droubi, I want to thank everyone who expressed their solidarity and support, and for all those who took the time to write the company management protesting the activist’s dismissal. The fight is NOT over though, as there are still unsettled issues here. One: The dismissal is still unjust, and our friend is still unemployed. Two: We still need a financial compensation for this unjust dismissal. So please dear readers, keep those emails to the management coming, till they do the right thing.

Mabrouk ya Droubster.. We hope we’ll hear more good news soon.

Ahmad Nabil el-Hilaly passes away

Veteran Marxist lawyer Ahmad Nabil el-Hilaly, died this morning of kidney failure in El-Salam Hospital, in Ma3adi, Cairo, only 11 days after his life-long friend and comrade Youssef Darwish passed away.
Born in 1928, the son of a landowning pasha who was the last Prime Minister of Egypt before the 1952 coup, Hilaly, a.k.a. Comrade Beshir, gave up his wealth and land, living instead a poor humble life, dedicating his career to defending peasants, workers, and the poor in Egypt and the Arab World. After helping revive the Egyptian Communist Party in 1975, Hilaly led a split in the late 1980s, cofounding with Darwish, the People’s Socialist Party.
Hilaly headed the legal defense team during the Revolutionary Socialists’ trial in 2004. Here’s his opening statement in court.
Hilaly’s funeral will take place tomorrow Monday noon, in front of 3omar Makram mosque in Tahrir Sq. His family and friends will mourn his death and receive condolences, Tuesday evening, at el-Hamdiya el-Shazliya mosque in Giza. Continue reading Ahmad Nabil el-Hilaly passes away

More on al Masri al Youm

There’s a profile of Hisham Kassem, the CEO of the independent Egyptian daily al Masri al Youm, in Business Today this month. Unfortunately the article stays clear from politics and therefore fails to explain why al Masri is a critically important newspaper in Egypt’s current political environment. Without al Masri al Youm, chances are the way Egyptian newspapers perceive recent events such as the parliamentary elections and the judges’ rebellion in a very different way. Continue reading More on al Masri al Youm

Three detainees released

State Security prosecutor ordered today the release of three pro-democracy detainees: Ahmad Maher, 3adel Fawzi Tawfeeq el-Gazzar, and Yasser Isma3il Zakki.
Also, following a protest by activists in front of the Public Prosecutor’s office last Thursday, General Isma3il el-Sha3er, the Cairo Security Director, reportedly sent an enquiry to the prison authorities about Mohamed el-Sharqawi‘s critical health condition. Sharqawi was transferred today to the Luman Tora Prison hospital at 9am, where he was told that his X-rays, taken on May 28, were “lost” (sic). The doctor took new X-rays of him, and sent Sharqawi, still complaining from chest pains, back to his cell, without treatment or medication.

Questions for Egyptian capitalists

For the economically minded, Business Today editor Patrick Fitzpatrick’s introduction to their “bt100” issue, which provides rankings of the top 100 companies in Egypt, is an interesting read. The picture it shows, as Patrick explains, is one of tremendous growth for corporate Egypt. Particularly notable is the growth in the petrochemical, construction and tourism sectors, which is indicative of more long-term wealth creation.

Yet this is also a growth that by far and large is not shared by the average Egyptian. No doubt there will be some trickle down effect from the growth seen above, and official (notoriously unreliable) unemployment statistics are down. For a while they cruised steadily at 9.9%, as if the government was afraid to breach some symbolic point. Real unemployment, for all we know, is around 20% or more, depending how you count the problem of under-employment. And then there’s the problem about whether the jobs that are created are as attractive as previous types of jobs, the strength of labor welfare in an increasingly competitive world (but one in which labor, not management, gets downsized), and a million other questions.

All of this is of political interest. How will the growth in the income gap will affect politics in a country with, despite its social stratification, a strong egalitarian fiber? (Egyptians, you might not realize this, but take it from a Moroccan: Nasser made you more egalitarian than many, many Arab countries.) What role will an increasingly powerful capitalist class will play in politics, from which it was until recently excluded? What market transparency do you have, as a serious capitalist, in a country where finance and investment banking is dominated by one firm (EFG-Hermes) that has strong ties to the government? What of individuals whose business acumen and personal wealth make them, to a certain extent, untouchable by the state (Naguib Sawiris, perhaps?) And how long will capitalists make do with a corrupt system (some have benefited from it, of course, but at a certain point corruption becomes an obstacle to business) or accept that economic fiefdoms are formed only due to proximity to the presidency? In the future, will it be tolerable that a Gamal or Alaa Mubarak should be able to become a partner in a venture simply by bullying his way in?

As Patrick says, it is true that there is more corporate governance in Egypt today than there was five years ago. But where do corporations and capitalists position themselves on the day’s political questions? Thus far, they don’t. In the future, we’ll see. I once asked a prominent Egyptian businessman who has played a not unimportant role in promoting corporate governance (hint: he’s mentioned by Patrick) in the country how he felt about Gamal Mubarak’s possible inheritance to the presidency. “Well, it would mean we’re not a democracy,” he said, before shrugging: “that would be too bad.”

Zarqawi’s successor

Neither the name Ayyoub al-Masri nor Abu Hamza al-Muhajer rang a bell. But after having a look at Zarqawi’s alleged successor’s photo, Islamist lawyer Montasser al-Zayat suggested to Al-Hayat, that the new head of the militant network in Iraq might be a man by the name Youssef al-Dardeeri, an Islamist from one of the Upper Egyptian provinces, who lived for sometime in el-Zawya el-Hamra neighborhood in Cairo. Continue reading Zarqawi’s successor

UN criticizes crackdown on dissent

The UN human rights body criticized, in a statement, the Egyptian government handling of the pro-democracy demos over the past couple of months. Three UN human rights experts “expressed alarm regarding the excessive use of force displayed against judges, human rights defenders, journalists and civil society in general during their peaceful protests in support of the independence of the judiciary and the two investigated judges.”

The Arabic press release could be found here.