Egypt's Police Coalition held a forum Friday to discuss means of establishing a police union to defend police working rights.
The meeting, held at the Police Club in Cairo's Nasr City, announced a plan to elect five officers to represent the coalition for each of the governorates of Cairo, Alexandria, Giza, Qalyoubia, Assiut, North Sinai and Qena.
The coalition will further elect sub-committees in other governorates.
The union plans to establish a link of communication between police officers and officials at the Ministry of Interior, reported Al-Ahram Arabic news website.
The meeting also criticised the recent cabinet reshuffle that saw the sacking of Minister of Interior Ahmed Gamal El-Din.
Meanwhile, coalition media coordinator Hesham Saleh told Al-Nahar TV anchor Mahmoud Saad Friday that they were optimistic about the new minister of interior, Mohamed Ibrahim.
Saleh added that the aim behind the creation of a union is to establish a legal entity within the interior ministry that unites the police apparatus and work on developing the ministry.
"They [police officers] know better than others how to purge and reconstruct [the ministry]," added Saleh, who criticised the media for not offering police offciers a platform to speak.
Many observers believe that widespread police brutality in Egypt was one of the main causes behind the eruption of the January 25 Revolution.
Clashes between protesters and the police during the 18-day uprising against the Mubarak's regime left around 840 protesters dead and more than 6,000 injured.
Saleh promised that "the police has changed after the revolution," adding that the police has lost around 165 of its members since January 2011.
Nevertheless, a recent report published by the Cairo-based Nadim Centre for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Torture recorded 34 cases of death, 88 cases of torture, and seven cases of sexual assault at the hands of the Egyptian police during President Mohamed Morsi's first 100 days in office.
CAIRO February 12, 2013 (AP)
Hundreds of Egypt's low-ranking policemen staged protests on Tuesday demanding they not be used as a tool for political oppression in the country's ongoing turmoil.
Dozens of policemen rallied outside local security administration headquarters in at least 10 provinces. Some of them carried signs reading, "we are innocent of the blood of the martyrs."
Although small, the protests marked a rare instance of dissent by Egypt's police force. The rallies reflect fears among many policemen of a public backlash after weeks of violent crackdowns on anti-government protests.
AP
Egyptian protesters throw stones while security police open water cannons on them from inside the grounds of the presidential palace during a demonstration in Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Feb. 11, 2013. Security forces sprayed protesters with water hoses and tear gas outside the presidential palace Monday as Egyptians marked the second anniversary of autocrat Hosni Mubarak’s ouster with angry demonstrations against his elected successor.(AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)
Close
Rights activists allege that police have used excessive force against the latest wave of protests that started on the eve of the second anniversary of the uprising that toppled longtime President Hosni Mubarak.
In the Mediterranean city of Alexandria, policemen gathered outside security headquarters shouting: "Down with the interior minister." They also chanted: "No to the Brotherhood takeover of the interior ministry," alleging that the country's largest Islamic group, The Muslim Brotherhood, is packing state institutions with its members. Egypt's Islamist President Mohammed Morsi was a longtime member of the group.
The protests come as the Shura Council, the country's Islamist-dominated interim parliament, is debating a new law to regulate demonstrations and require protesters to get permission from the ministry of interior to hold their protest.
The protesters said that they are against laws that would make them responsible for permitting or preventing protests and which would eventually put them in confrontation with protesters.
출처
http://she2i2.blogspot.kr/2012/03/egypt-police-seek-to-reform-through.html
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Egypt: Police seek reform through unionization
Egypt Independent
Policemen see security reform in unionization
Sun, 26/02/2012
Jano Charbel
Thousands of policemen and officers across Egypt are seeking to establish trade unions with which to protect their interests. Legal obstacles, however, stand in their way.
Egypt's trade union legislation — particularly Trade Union Law 35/1976 and its predecessors — specifically mentions that the police and armed forces are not allowed to join or form any sort of professional associations. In its current format, a new draft law on trade union liberties also stipulates similar provisions.
Moreover, Conventions 87 and 98 of the International Labor Organization, which Egypt ratified in the 1950s, stipulate that it is up to each state’s discretion whether to allow for the establishment of unions among police or armed forces.
But policemen argue that their unionization would assist the country in efforts toward reforming the Interior Ministry, with police abuses being a notable cause behind the eruption of the Egyptian revolution: 25 January, the day when masses broke out against the police and the regime, was originally celebrated as Egyptian Police Day.
“Unions may also help us in cleansing, or at least monitoring, corrupt elements and abuses within the Interior Ministry,” said policeman Khaled Badran.
Hassan Shendy, another policeman, said unionizing Egypt's police forces would “help to identify those responsible for acts of corruption, bribery, torture or other abuses, and take action against them.”
Shendy added that unions would “help to improve our working conditions and raise our incomes, and in doing so would help to decrease the phenomena of corruption and bribery among the police.”
“Unions will help us settle our financial and professional problems,” he said. “When we settle our problems, then we will be better prepared to settle the streets’ problems. This will help the whole security balance of the country.”.
Badran said police do not want to protest for a union and the rest of their rights.
“We want a legitimate association through which we can put forth our demands and raise them to the officials as one cohesive group,” the policeman said.
Egyptian labor and law enforcement legislation bans police forces from engaging in protests and strikes, although a number of police protests have taken place since Hosni Mubarak’s ouster on 11 February 2011.
These protests began just two days after Mubarak’s abdication. Thousands of policemen protested outside the Interior Ministry in Cairo on 22 March for improved wages and working conditions, and a fire broke out in the ministry. A number of other police protests took place nationwide in October and November of last year.
Shendy concluded, “We don’t want unions for the sake of engaging in politics or unrest, we want an exclusively professional association. We want a union that prevents punitive measures against both policemen and civilians.”
However, the trajectory for establishing such unions appears hazy among union organizers, particularly as police employees are presenting a less-than-unified front.
Officers are attempting to establish unions for themselves, while lower-ranking policemen are going after separate unions. Some have sought to federate these unions under the affiliation of the state-controlled Egyptian Trade Union Federation, while others have sought to establish their unions under the umbrella of the Egyptian Federation of Independent Trade Unions.
“Police forces should have the right to unionize because they are state employees who are responsible for law enforcement among the civilian population. Therefore they should have the same rights to organize as any other employees,” argued Emad al-Araby, the independent union federation’s deputy secretary general.
Araby went on to say “unionizing the police would help tend to their needs, and thus it would diminish the numbers of protests and strikes in which they are involved.”
Araby denied allegations that the Egyptian Federation of Independent Trade Unions is an opposition entity or a politicized federation.
“We are against the establishment of any unions on the basis of political or party affiliation,” Araby said. “We take off our political robes at the doors of our union offices. This is what we expect of all unions within this federation.”
“Claims that unionizing the police will lead to their politicization are baseless,” Araby said.
The union organizer pointed out that the Union of Civil Employees of the Interior Ministry had already been established under the federation’s umbrella in January of this year, although this union is not open to policemen or officers.
Some 700 Cairo-based policemen have sought to establish a union through the federation, though it seems the majority of policemen and officers have preferred to establish their unions via the Egyptian Trade Union Federation, Araby said.
Shendy said more than 250,000 policemen around the country are interested in establishing unions in their governorates.
“Given that we are state employees, we want ETUF membership because it is more closely associated with the state,” he said.
In Qalyubiya, the Egyptian Federation of Independent Trade Unions helped policemen establish an independent union, which is pending recognition from the Manpower and Interior ministries but is, in effect, functioning. While that federation is taking steps, the state federation is still dragging its feet regarding the establishment of these unions.
Badran indicated that the coalitions of policemen and officers that emerged since the revolution “aim at promoting the rights of both civilians and police forces in a new Egypt that respects the rule of law.” Badran pointed out that the calls for the establishment of police unions came from these coalitions.
Major Ahmed Ragab, a former member of the Coalition of Police Officers, said there have been numerous applications to Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim calling for the establishment of unions, yet he has not yet replied to these applications.
“This is not the time for such demands. The ministry's first priority is to uphold security on Egypt’s streets, and confront lawbreakers, drug dealers and arms traders,” Ragab said.
The major indicated that unionization of police forces is in itself an illegal act.
Commenting on police unions acting as potential agents of reform within the ministry, Ragab said "there is in fact a nationwide restructuring effort on the part of the Interior Ministry. In its attempt to reach out to civil society, the ministry has established the Administration of Communications with Human Rights Centers and NGOs.”
Ragab concluded by saying “there is no need for such unions, for we already have clubs for police officers and policemen. These are sufficient to serve as venues where police forces can meet and discuss their concerns.”
According to Araby, however, “these police clubs are not like the Judges Clubs, which serve as professional associations. Police clubs are only spaces for informal social gatherings. They resemble cafeterias rather than professional associations.”
“We are still studying the means by which we can establish police unions in keeping with new laws, even if this involves drafting new legislation,” Araby added.
Late last month, Alexandria’s Coalition of Police Officers sent its paperwork and notarizations to the Manpower Ministry calling for the right to unionize. The ministry is due to accept or refuse their application within 60 days.
The coalition has suggested that it might resort to the judiciary in hopes of a ruling for unionization, but their chances appear to be slim — unless the laws are changed, or unless the police are able to exert enough pressure on these authorities to accept their unionization efforts.
Numerous countries around the world have legalized the unionization of police forces, including Australia, Belgium, Canada, UK, the US and Sweden, among many others.
*Photograph by Mohamed Maarouf
1 comment:
Amargi said...
This is a really bad idea. In a lot of places the police union is one of the most reactionary political bodies. They always defend capitalism and call for increases in state powers. They never stand in solidarity with other unions.
Finally the idea that a union would limit corruption just does not bear out. Police unions around the world have been instremental in covering up corruption.
첫댓글 과거 남아프리카 백인정권이 흑인해방운동 탄압도구로 흑인경찰 내몰자 반발하며 남아프리카경찰노조 설립했던 것처럼... 왜 한국경찰은 그렇게 못할까요?!