Independent trade unions case referred to Supreme Constitutional Court

Sunday 26-06-2016 04:41 PM

Mahalla textile workers' strike in 2007. REUTERS

CAIRO, Jun 26 (Aswat Masriya) - An Egyptian administrative court decided on Sunday to refer a lawsuit calling for the dissolution of independent trade unions to the Supreme Constitutional court.

Khaled Ali, a prominent rights lawyer who is working on the case, said on his social media accounts that the court has responded to the defence team and referred the 1976 Trade Union Law to the Supreme Constitutional court "to judge the constitutionality of the provisions that deprive the working class of trade union freedoms and the right to organise."

The General Union of Tax, Finance and Customs Employees, which is affiliated to the state-controlled Egyptian Trade Union Federation, is the institution that filed the lawsuit against the independent trade unions.

The lawsuit called for voiding the formation of independent unions and syndicates, including the Egyptian Federation of Independent Trade Unions, the General Union of Real Estate Tax, the General Trade Union of Workers of Sales Taxes, and the General Trade Union of Workers of Public Taxes.

The lawsuit also demanded that the decision to allow independent trade unions to open bank accounts be cancelled, and that they not be allowed to issue membership subscriptions. 

Last Labour Day, the U.S.-based international watchdog Human Rights Watch called on Egypt to “end the decades-old single official union system.”

In line with the 1967 Trade Union Law, the Egyptian government does not recognise independent unions, which emerged in 2008 and started to proliferate after the 2011 Uprising. 

Only the unions operating under the umbrella of the state-controlled Egyptian Trade Union Federation, established in 1957, are recognised by the government.

The 2011 Uprising, which ended the 30-year-long rule of former president Hosni Mubarak, had heralded some independence for trade unions, according to Human Rights Watch. 

Egypt's constitution stipulates that the state “shall protect workers’ rights.” 

A wave of recurrent workers’ strikes, which began in late 2006, shaped the build-up to the 2011 Uprising. 

The wave started with a strike in December 2006 by the workers of the Mahalla textile workers. 

In April 2008, the Mahallah textile workers had planned another strike to protest the increased cost of living and low wages. 

The strike attempt was thwarted, which pushed workers to take to the streets and clash with security forces. Calls for solidarity led to street clashes with police and the birth of the April 6 Youth Movement, one of the groups that electrified the January uprising.  

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