من أجل حد ادنى عادل للأجور:- مظاهرة للمطالبة برفع الحد الأدنى للأجور لـ1200 جنيه
02 Apr 2010, written by Mohammed Maree 1 Comments
by Comrade Gaber
دعت اللجنة التحضيرية للعمال والنقابة المستقلة للضرائب العقارية و المركز المصري للحقوق الاقتصادية ولجنة عمال البريد ورابطة عمال غزل المحلة ومؤسسة الهلالي للحريات لمظاهرة حاشدة في الحادية عشرة صباح السبت الموافق الثالث من أبريل القادم في شارع حسين حجازي أمام مجلس الوزراء للمطالبة برفع الحد الأدنى للأجور ل1200 جنيه تنفيذا لقانون العمل الذي صدر في نفس التوقيت من عام 2003 ، ولوقف سياسات الخصخصة.
Alexandrian family tortured by police أسرة تعذيب اسكندرية
02 Apr 2010, written by Mohammed Maree 0 CommentsThe Family in Alexandria… photo by Mohammed Maree
by Phili Risk via almasryalyoum
Alexandria–At 2 AM on 3 December, 2009 Abdallah Abdel Aziz opened the door in response to a loud knock on the family’s front door. The six-year-old was completely unaware of the danger that was about to follow.
About a dozen members of the Muharram Bek, Alexandria police force entered the house demanding the whereabouts of Ibrahim, the 18-year-old son of Afaf and Mohamed Abdel Aziz, the owner of a small bakery. Upon being informed that he was not home, the officers decided to punish the family instead.
“The boy opened the door … and I heard them say ‘take her, take her’ and suddenly I could no longer see from the amount of beating,” Afaf said, “then they pushed me down the stairs.”
Afaf, 60, still suffers from a severe injury to her right leg from that day.
When Faten Abdel Aziz, 40, tried to interfere, an officer said “take her and kill her as well,” Faten recounted. For her father it was no different.
Late that night the police dragged the three of them down the street, locked them in security vehicles, and took them to the police station.
At the police station no one was interested in hearing their side of the story. An officer yelled at Afaf when she tried to explain what was happening, “shut up or I will squash you,” she recalled him saying.
When Afaf’s daughter was brought before another interrogating officer he threatened Afaf’s unmarried daughter Siham saying he would, “turn her into a woman,” she explained. Later on he told her to shut up or else he would fabricate drug charges against her and her family.
“It is the first time I learned that the public prosecutor can be influenced in this way, I had always thought that they are supposed to be an independent entity,” Faten Abdel Aziz reflected on the incident, “in our case I sensed that the prosecutor and the officers held one shared position.”
The police never came after Ibrahim again. His father, mother and two sisters were transferred to separate prisons on charges of resisting state authorities. The officers accused 70-year-old Mohamed Abdel Aziz of trying to light a bottle of natural gas in a collective family effort to prevent the authorities from arresting his son.
When the family finally appeared before a judge 35 days later, the court deemed them innocent and released them immediately.
The family believes only one interpretation of the course of events.
Prior to the late night police attack Ibrahim Abdel Aziz had been incarcerated without charge for a year allegedly due to job-related problems.
Ibrahim sells satellite TV subscriptions, and upon his release he learned that the two streets of his neighborhood that he used to administer had been given to his competitor. The youth was determined to take back his old territory and began cutting his old customers’ cables seeking a way to threaten his competitor.
“The police came with orders to arrest us. There is no explanation other than that they are in cohorts with Ibrahim’s competitor,” said Mohamed Abdel Aziz.
The family explained that satellite TV subscriptions earn the company about LE165,000 a month. They are certain that the police are being paid a share of this illegal operation, up to LE50,000 a month. Ibrahim interfered in their dirty business and thus had to be punished.
When they couldn’t locate Ibrahim the police punished his entire family instead. They wanted to send a message: No one disrupts the police’s interests, legal or illegal.
Unlike many others, the Abdel Aziz family chose to go public with the story.
“I thought we lived in a democratic country,” Faten said. “This only happens in the Dark Ages,” her father added.
“Of course I live in fear, if this is what they do to me when I haven’t done anything, then I have to be afraid,” said Mohamed Abdel Aziz. Though the father does not fully blame Ibrahim for the events, he said he never wanted to see his son again nor talk to him.
His wife Afaf is scared every time someone knocks on the door. “I don’t sleep well at night,” she said, “I keep reliving those days in prison.”
In March, the Federation Internationale des Droits de l’Homme (FIDH) and its Egyptian partner organizations held a press conference following the release of a report on torture in Egypt.
Aida Seif el-Dawla, program coordinator of the Nadim Center for Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence explained that judging from the patients visiting her center the Egyptian authorities’ use of torture “intensifies by the day,” with the aim of imposing their “hierarchy of power.”
Meanwhile Stéphanie David, the North Africa and Middle East desk director for FIDH explained that amendments made in 2007 provide a blanket for arrests, home searches and holding of suspects and have turned such legal breaches into a systemic occurrence. Rather than holding the Egyptian authorities accountable, Western governments are “patting it on the back,” the FIDH regional director said.
David explained that the Egyptian government prohibits legal procedures against torturers. If a case is raised, torturers are usually sent to the public prosecutor who usually does not prosecute state-sanctioned offenders.
At the press conference Aida Seif el-Dawla explained that the current Egyptian public’s largely passive response to torture could one day turn violent. “Police stations might be burned, police officers might be shot,” she said, adding that this could evolve as part of a “nationwide vendetta.”
Rights campaigners say what is clear in the Abdel Aziz family case is that the law is employed to legitimize police-sponsored criminality. Torture is used to instill fear in anyone who might consider interfering in what Stéphanie David of the FIDH terms a, “culture of exceptionality.”
“The TV dish sellers are the ones who said they would have us arrested. They wouldn’t have said that unless they were confident in the ‘rulers’ of the neighborhood,” Mohamed Abdel Aziz added.
Seif el-Dawla warned, “if they [the Egyptian authorities] do not want chaos and violence they better start holding people accountable … not only the ones carrying out torture with their own hands, but also those that give the orders.”
Related Posts:-
قسم شرطة محرم بك :-ضرب وتنكيل لأب وخمس سيدات وتهديد احداهن بالاغتصاب
Bookmarks:- Elbaradei in Mansoura البرادعى فى المنصورة
02 Apr 2010, written by Mohammed Maree 0 Comments-
بالفيديو والصور.. آلالاف يستقبلون البرادعي بمظاهرة حاشدة في شوارع المنصورة | الدستور
-
Egyptian Chronicles: In Mansoura
Excellent coverage for Elbaradei,s visit today from Zeinobia
-
اليوم السابع | البرادعى يدعو المصريين للتوحد خلفه ونبذ الخلافات
Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.
You can follow Elbaradei,s Group News here
نيابة امن الدولة بدمنهور تقرر حبس صحفى بجريدة نهضة مصر واثنين من اعضاء مركز حقوقى 15 يوم
31 Mar 2010, written by Mohammed Maree 0 Commentsقررت نيابة امن الدولة بدمنهور حبس مراسل جريدة نهضة مصر بالاسكندرية محمد المدنى وأثنين من اعضاء مركز الشهاب لحقوق الانسان بالاسكندرية وهما اسلام رفاعى توفيق وصهيد رجب ومواطن اخر يدعى أحمد الخدال 15 يوما على ذمة التحقيق الذى لم يستعلم عن تفاصيلة حتى الان ولا التهمة المحددة الموجهة لهم , وترجع وقائع القبض الى استغاثة المواطن أحمد الخدال بمركز الشهاب لحقوق الانسان من قيام مباحث امن الدولة برشيد باقتحام منزلة منتصف هذا الشهر وانتهاك حرمة منزلة وتكسير محتويات المنزل فى الوقت الذى كان فية بالسعودية لتأدية مناسك العمرة , واستجاب المركز لاستغاثة المواطن فذهب الية لتوثيق ما حدث من انتهاكات كلا من اسلام رفاعى مدير برامج بمركز الشهاب ومساعدة صهيد رجب والصحفى محمد المدنى , وتم القبض عليهم ظهر يوم الثلاثاء الماضى 30/32010 بمنزل المواطن
ويعتزم مركز ضحايا لحقوق الانسان بالاسكندرية بالتنسيق مع مركز الشهاب وحزب الجبهة والكرامة والغد تنظيم وقفة احتجاجية اليوم الخميس 1/4/2010 الساعة 12 ظهرا امام المحكمة الكلية بالمنشية للمطالبة بالافراج عن المحتجزين
حكم تاريخي بإلزام الحكومة بوضع حد أدنى عادل للأجور في المجتمع
31 Mar 2010, written by Mohammed Maree 0 Commentsقال المركز المصري للحقوق الاقتصادية والاجتماعية لقد حصلت الطبقة العاملة المصرية على حكم تاريخي يلزم رئيس الجمهورية ورئيس الوزراء والمجلس القومي للأجور بوضع حد أدنى عادل للأجور في المجتمع، وقد قدم المركز ضمن مستندات الدعوى دراسة للباحث الاقتصادي أحمد السيد النجار أوضحت إمكانية زيادة الأجور في المجتمع من خلال الموازنة الحالية للدولة، ودراسة أخرى من مركز المعلومات ودعم اتخاذ القرار أوضحت التطور التاريخي للحد الأدنى للأجر في مصر والذي توقف رسميا عند 35 جنيه بموجب القانون 53 لسنة 1984.
لقد ترافع المركز المصري للحقوق الاقتصادية والاجتماعية عن ناجى رشاد القيادي العمالي بمطاحن جنوب القاهر والذي قام برفع الدعوى مطالبا بتنفيذ نصوص الدستور المصري والإعلان العالمي لحقوق الإنسان، والميثاق العربي لحقوق الإنسان، والعهد الدولي للحقوق الاقتصادية والاجتماعية التي تضمنت أحكاما بضرورة وضع حد أدنى للأجر يضمن للعامل وأسرته حياه لائقة و كريمه، كما أوضح المركز أن قانون العمل 12 لسنة 2003 أنشأ مجلس قومي للأجور من مهامه وضع حدا أدنى للأجور على المستوى القومي بمراعاة نفقات المعيشة وبإيجاد الوسائل و التدابير التي تكفل تحقيق التوازن بين الأجور والأسعار.، وهو النص الذي أهملت الحكومة تطبيقه عن عمد لذا طالبنا في المحكمة بوقف تنفيذ القرار السلبي بالامتناع عن وضع حد أدنى عادل للأجور .
وبعد أن تداولت الدعوى بالجلسات لمدة قاربت على العام أصدرت محكمة القضاء الإداري حكمها اليوم ,بوقف تنفيذ هذا القرار السلبي بما ترتب عليه من آثار أخصها إلزام المدعى عليهم بوضع حد أدنى عادل للأجور.
هذا وسوف يحصل المركز على نسخة من الحكم لتقديمها لمجلس الوزراء يوم 3 ابريل فى التظاهرة التى دعى إليها المركز مع العديد من القوى العمالية والحقوقية للمطالبة بوضع حد أدنى للأجور فى المجتمع.








