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حسام الحملاوي

The Memory of the Class: The Mahalla Uprising إنتفاضة المحلة at 3arabawy - 0 views

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    Photos of the Mahalla Uprising by Nasser Nouri
حسام الحملاوي

Some notes on the Mahalla Uprising at 3arabawy - 0 views

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    ON GENERAL STRIKES, INTERNET ACTIVISM & CYBER-FANTASIES
حسام الحملاوي

Updates from Mahalla متابعات من المحلة at 3arabawy - 0 views

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    The Mahalla Uprising blogged from another continent..
حسام الحملاوي

«كفاية» تنظم مظاهرة في ذكري «انتفاضة الخبز» للإعلان عن رفضها إلغاء الدعم - 0 views

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    Kefaya to mark the Jan 1977 Bread Uprising
حسام الحملاوي

The Mahalla Intifada إنتفاضة المحلة - a set on Flickr - 0 views

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    Photos of the Mahalla Uprising, taken by Nasser Nouri, originally in colors, but I edited them using Adobe Lightroom converting them into B&W..
حسام الحملاوي

Egypt: Anatomy of an Uprising || The Catalyst - 0 views

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    "Though certainly a minority of Egyptians have regular access to the internet and fewer read blogs, the shockwaves created by the leftist revolutionaries blogging Egypt's social ills do reach the streets."
Tony Sullivan

Behind the Brotherhood's losses in historic Doctors' Syndicate elections - Politics - E... - 1 views

  • The Indepenence List also won total, or near total, control of provincial syndicate boards in Ismailiya, Suez and Aswan – governorates where the Brotherhood could claim widespread support for its brand of politics.
  • in the last years of Mubarak, a younger generation of doctors started to organise in rank and file militant groups such as Doctors Without Rights (DWR) outside of the Syndicate’s internal body, against both Mubarak’s regime and the Brotherhood’s conservative union policies. In the aftermath of the January 25 revolution, these radical doctors, many of whom actually took part in the uprising against the dictator and were emboldened by their success in ousting him, embarked on organising their co-workers for campaigns to take workplace actions and strikes to improve their conditions.
  • This contrast between the new attitude of emboldened members and a static leadership was illustrated during the unprecedented national doctors’ strike last May. When doctors in public hospitals took industrial action against the government to demand minimum salaries and increased spending on healthcare from 4 per cent to 15 per cent of the budget, both the president of the Syndicate, Hamdy El-Sayed, and the Brotherhood-controlled national syndicate board denounced the strikers. Dr Mona Mina, a member of DWR who won a seat on the new national syndicate board in last Friday’s election and was one of the organisers of that historic strike, told Ahram Online that doctors found it hard to win that battle because of the Syndicate’s hostile position
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  • Although the Brotherhood backed Abdel Dayem for the position of Syndicate president, the Islamist group will not be able to count on him as an erstwhile ally. In fact, a large number of those who supported Independence and Tahrir candidates also voted for Khairy Abdel Dayem to head the Syndicate. Indeed, Dr Mona Mina herself supported Abdel Dayem for syndicate president. A closer look at Abdel Dayem’s campaign literature and interviews to media actually showed that he pushed economic demands and healthcare reform proposals almost identical to those raised by the Independence and Tahrir lists.
  • Dr Mona Mina, now one of six Independence members of the national syndicate board
  • In the national syndicate board elections, the Independence List won six out of 24 seats, and broke the Brotherhood’s monopoly over power there
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