Tagged: cairo
The investors behind Daily News Egypt
NOTE: This is NOT an article or journalism. This is my personal testimony outlining my experience while working at DNE.
UPDATE 11/5/2012: On May 10, about a day after this blog was posted, the investors finally agreed to pay forward DNE editorial staff their April salaries. However, the lawsuit regarding workers’ compensation which we filed at Egypt’s labor office is still ongoing and we have no intention of revoking it.
The publication I’ve worked for over the past year, owned by Egyptian Media Services, a joint company which launched Daily News Egypt, not only decided to shut down without considering the legal rights of its employees, but investors are now also withholding the April salaries of just the editorial staff.
Although the investors have tried to justify their illegal decision to withhold our salaries by alleging that we have withheld from them passwords to DNE’s Twitter and Facebook accounts, the real issue here is that they are angered and surprised that we have pursued a law suit against them through the Egyptian labor office in an attempt to retrieve our rights.
Not only have the investors brought the newspaper to the ground with poor management skills and a failed business model over the past years, but they have failed to provide their employees with their most basic rights. According to Egypt’s labor office, they have also illegally began a liquidation process without informing us as a staff in order to avoid their legal obligations towards their employees. Investors at EMS include Taher Helmy, partner at Baker & Mckenzie and former Amcham chairman, Ahmed Badrawy, SODIC business development director, Hamza ElKhouli, Farid Saad, Gilbert and Reda Gargour of Lecico.
In its seven years as an English paper in Egypt, DNE staff members have dedicated five to six years to building the publication from scratch with very limited resources. They’ve been patient with the investors’ shortcomings, remaining intact when they had every right to stage a strike and walk out. The editors would remain and even provide the investors with several business models to reshape the paper so it could hopefully one day reach its full potential.
But, what I witnessed over the past year was humiliation and disrespect as an employee and human being. I watched my fellow colleagues who were journalists and editors that I respected and looked up to also suffer. The investors have dealt with us like slaves. People who read DNE would assume that we were working with a full staff. We barely had 10 full time staff members (4 reporters & 6 editors), a meager budget for freelancers, and one marketing representative responsible for an ENTIRE newspaper in Egypt.
The company, of course, did not cover our phone bills or health benefits. In fact, many of us, after working with the company for years, were shocked to find out that we were not even provided with the minimum social insurance that we were promised in our initial contracts. Yet, we were expected to cover violence during an ongoing revolution. And we did. We covered everything that we could, often feeling disheartened that we could not cover the country to our fullest potential. But we did it everyday anyway, remaining steadfast.
We listened with disgust and surprise as our executive board member, Mr. Ahmed Badrawy, who is ironically a business development manager at SODIC, expected us as journalists to get involved in the marketing of the paper. In one of his last meetings with the staff, he asked us to “plump” up the paper so he could sell it to potential buyers in a last attempt to save it from closure. In fact, as journalists, Mr. Badrawy told us we too are responsible for “monetizing” the paper. Not only did he expect journalists to work overtime and cover an entire country, but he expected them to step out of their ethical boundaries and market the paper, something that was his job as a business developer to undertake.
In the same meeting, a month before the paper was shut down, we were told by Mr. Badrawy that when the company closed we would have no rights outstanding, despite the labor law which obliges company owners to settle with their employees if the company goes out of business. Legally, each employee has the right to 2 months of salary for every year they dedicated to the company. However, they not only wanted to deprive us of those rights, we were also not paid our salaries for the month of April, despite a signed document which stated that when the company closes on April 22, 2012 that all employees are to be paid their salaries in full on April 30, 2012.
The issue here is not just about a few journalists who often put their life on the line and ended up with no appreciation in the end. For years the DNE editorial staff remained silent, patient, and loyal to their posts as journalist, avoiding to become the “story” themselves. The issue here is about workers’ rights.
Ironically, a staff that has covered the rights of others for years as the only independent English Daily in Egypt is now being denied their most basic rights.
If Mr. Badrawy and his fellow partners do this with a staff of journalists well connected to the media and educated enough to understand the law in order to be able to fight for their rights, then how do they handle the legal rights of other employees in their other investments, who may not have the will or the tools to do the same?
For more on the story behind the investors of DNE in Arabic, click here.
Viva La Revolution
Be warned, some language is explicit.
The video above shows the Head of Security in the province of Damnhour, Egypt talking to his team of police officers, basically pumping them up so they can continue to “crush” civilians if they are out of line. They see civilians as subordinates, as thorns that they have to crush, not citizens they must protect. In a democratic, civilized society, this kind of talk can’t even be targeted towards criminals or murderers.
This is what has been happening for 30 years and this is what sparked the revolution in Egypt in the first place. Egyptian civilians and workers simply cannot continue to be treated without dignity. They cannot continue to be stabbed in the back by their should-be protectors. And, they definitely can not remain silent as all of this continues and their revolution gets crushed after hundreds of Egyptians died, thousands suffered, and were tormented.
Again, as long as the old regime, people like Prime Minister Shafik, & the man in this video are still in power, our revolution did not succeed. The problem is that this video is not a single incident. This is how most police officers and officials think and act. This is the mentality that cost us 356+ Egyptian lives. It’s the same mentality that has opressed us for decades. It’s the same mindset that crippled freedom of speech, reform, and unity in Egypt.
After this video spread, officials responded by saying this man was “moved” to another province to another position. What good will that do?! It’s not like they moved him to another country, he’s still poisoning Egyptian society. This won’t work anymore.
عاشت الثورة المصرية
Mubarak, Shafik, & Sharm…

Mubarak socializing with tourists in Sharm el Sheikh. photo from flickr.com
When Mubarak told his Vice President Omar Suleiman to announce to the Egyptian people that he was relinquishing, or voluntarily “letting go” of power, Mubarak and his family supposedly headed to reside in their palace in resort city of Sharm el Sheikh.
After all the violence his administration subjected us to and the deaths of our fellow Egyptians (before and after Jan 25), we all felt a relief that day on February 11, 2011 when Mubarak finally decided to step out of the picture. However, today, concerns are different. The revolution still has demands which were not met, but let’s just focus here on one of the main concerns of the revolution: Removing Prime Minister Ahmed Shafik, who was appointed by Mubarak himself. All of these factors, along with Mubarak’s presence in Sharm are valid threats to the revolution. Here’s some simple reasons why:
Shafik is a close friend to the ex-president, in fact they’ve been buddies since Shafik was a fighter pilot under Mubarak in Egypt’s 1973 Yom Kippur war. Having him in power as our prime minister is a conflict of interest. The fact that he was appointed by the ex-president also makes him illegitimate in the people’s eyes. Not to mention, appointing friends and family should not be the case. This is not a mafia, or a country club. This is a nation where people need to finally have the chance to elect their officials.
Therefore, Mubarak & his family will not be prosecuted as long as Ahmed Shafik and his cabinet are in power. To further understand why, we can see look to the case of Libya for example, Louis Moreno Ocampo, prosecutor from the International Criminal Court in The Hague, clearly stated that ICC cannot investigate Muammar Qaddafi for any crimes unless Libya files a case and demands justice. The same goes for Egypt. As long as our general prosecutor and our cabinet (the people who have power allow the ICC to investigate) remain the same from Mubarak’s regime, then we have accomplished nothing.
As long as Shafik & the rest of the cabinet is still in place, this will never happen. As long as Mubarak is living under the sovereignty of Egypt, he is untouchable. It’s because he knows very well what he’s doing. He knows that if he leaves, it will not only be a slap in the face for him, but he will be investigated and prosecuted at the International Criminal Court because he will no longer be protected in Egypt by his lifelong friends and cronies. It’s not that he wants to “die on Egyptian soil” as he put it or because Egypt is his beloved. If Egypt was indeed his beloved, as president he wouldn’t have invested in property all over the world and instead, he would’ve invested more in his beautiful country and its people that he neglected for 30 years. Or maybe that’s just too patriotic, but that’s just my humble opinion.
Many are still wondering why we can’t just leave Shafik as prime minister and let Mubarak stay in Sharm and ask for his assetts to be frozen until prosecutors can investigate. The answer is, nobody should be above the law. Mubarak and his cronies taught the police and the regime that they are above the citizens. Mubarak ordered the torturing of political prisoners. He knew that his administration was corrupt, in fact, he chose them! His administration and his ruling party also ordered prisoners and thugs to escape, loot, rape, kill and do whatever they want.
The fact that the Commander in Chief of the armed forces and the nation allowed all of this to happen is a catastrophe. It is his responsibility to ensure the safety of his people. And, there is not such thing as “well maybe he didn’t know.” Because, frankly, that would be an even bigger problem and it would make him even more guilty.
To find out details about who Ahmed Shafik really is, view this link, which is in Arabic.
In order for the revolution to be completed successfully, justice must be served and the current government must be changed.
To understand more on why Mubarak’s presence in Egypt serves as a threat to the revolution, you can watch Dr. Mohamed Hassanein Heikal give his insight on the issue:
‘Burn the Evidence’
Reports from Cairo today, Wednesday 23 February 2011: Interior ministry is on fire.
According to AlJazeera Arabic breaking news, the office that was burning contained information regarding criminal charges, such as murders, money laundering, etc. (جنايات)
I wonder why? Isn’t Habib Al Adly, Ex-minister of interior supposed to go on trial soon? And, isn’t the police and national security responsible for the deaths of 350+ civilians & protesters since the beginning of Jan 25? Aren’t they also responsible for subjecting civilians to torture and violence?
Just a reminder, the day after Ben Ali’s regime collapsed, the first thing police and security did was burn down a prison with detainees inside. (Tunisian government also participated in torturing/detaining prisoners for the United States.)
This is exactly the kind of thing that the revolution was fighting against. Where is justice? Where is accountability and transparency? If a revolution pauses, it ends. The fact that the army could not secure the Ministry of Interior from burning today is a catastrophe. The revolution is not over. If it had succeeded, the police who set fire to the Ministry of Interior wouldn’t even be allowed to walk the streets after the crimes they committed before and after the Jan 25 revolution. If it had succeeded, Mubarak would not be chilling in Sharm El Sheikh. After all, that’s what he was always doing when he was in power anyway. It’s not like he cared to fix the country or he actually stayed in Cairo to tend to civilian needs.
Ironically enough, just two days before this fire incident, Army generals were live on Egyptian TV saying that they were conducting investigations and gathering evidence in order to bring all corrupt officials to justice. How will they complete their investigations if evidence could be destroyed at the ministries were the corruption emerged? Many corrupt officials still haven’t been arrested yet, and you can’t expect them to welcome their evidence & history to be exposed.
This is why revolutionaries of Jan 25 are asking for faster and more transparent steps to be taken. This is why they want the rest of the government cleaned out, because corrupt officials who were members of the former Mubarak regime still remain. They are still in positions of power and are fighting for their immunity at the costs of Egyptian lives, justice, & freedom.
It’s time for everyone who abused their position of power to be held accountable. It’s also time for all of the revolution’s demands to be met. Only then will this revolution be complete.
