Boats are seen along the Nile in Cairo , Nov. 18, 2014. (photo
by REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
Are Egypt ’s
poor paying the price for Cairo
development project?
Many
However,
the project has left hundreds of riverboat owners and crew members stranded without work. The Cairo governorate, in
cooperation with the Nile River police, began evacuating riverboats from the banks along the
Nile Corniche in late August. Many of these boat owners have been operating
from the waterfront for several years.
On
Aug. 20, Cairo Gov. Galal al-Saeed ordered the licensed riverboats to
move to the docks at the al-Sahel area and banned boat owners from returning
back to the docking area near Tahrir, amid objections and anger from the affected parties.
The displaced workers staged protests in mid-September in front of the
Nile Corniche. Moreover, riverboat owner sheld a sit-in in the area that began Sept. 11 and
lasted several days.
Protesters
raised banners stating that the governorate decision has harmed 200 families
whose breadwinners will be transferred to the docks at al-Sahel area, where the environment is not
suitable for work given the proliferation of garbage, neglect,
bullying and theft.
Yet
despite protests, the governorate disregarded the sit-in and continued
work on the Corniche project, for which it allocated 8 million Egyptian pounds (around $1 million).
Dozens
of riverboat owners protested outside the Egyptian Cabinet on Sept. 30, but
they soon ended
the demonstration after the Central Security Forces assaulted some
master’s and Ph.D. degree holders who were staging a protest in the same location at the same
time. The degree holders were calling for appointments in high-ranking state
positions, demanding an end to nepotism.
Mahmoud
Hassan, the owner of a Nile riverboat who was affected by the Cairo governorate’s decision, told
Al-Monitor, “The governorate has yet to fulfill the promises it made to us. We
have yet to be transferred to the docks of al-Sahel area according to the
decision of Cairo ’s
governor — although these docks are completely unsuitable for operating our
boats, unequipped with electricity and full of garbage. The governorate did not
compensate us, although we have ownership documents for the Corniche docks and
licenses for our Nile boats. In cooperation
with the Nile water police, the governorate
removed the anchors and forced us to evacuate the Nile Corniche. Whoever dared
to object was arrested and had his boat seized.”
Hassan
accused the Cairo governorate of siding with the
owners of hotels along this section of the Nile
and the owners of larger tourist boats by evacuating the riverboats, which are
very popular among low-income residents. An entire boat
could be rented for an hourly fee of about 50 pounds, or
less than $7.
Mahmoud
Abu al-Yeser, another riverboat owner, told Al-Monitor, “The governorate wants
to regenerate the Corniche at the expense of the poor and to please the rich
who are the owners of hotels and tourist boats, although we have been working
in [this area] for decades.”
He
echoed Hassan, complaining that the state has yet to provide any alternative
and has failed to deliver on promises to relocate their docks.
“The
affected riverboat owners filed a complaint to the Cabinet, but no response was
issued. The state does not care about our crisis, although more than 5,000
workers working on over 120 riverboats have been rendered jobless and forced to
move away from the Tahrir Corniche,” Abu al-Yeser said.
Abu
al-Yeser denied media accusations that riverboat owners were harassing women at the Tahrir Corniche. He said,
“The police forces were deployed near the boats to guard the hotels. If
harassment was happening, this means that they are the ones to blame. There is
no justification for harming the workers' families, who now find themselves
deprived of any source of livelihood or income.”
Khalid
Mustafa, spokesman for the Cairo governorate,
told Al-Monitor, “The governorate has set its mind on completing the project to
rejuvenate downtown Cairo and considers the Nile
Corniche in the Tahrir area a [key part] of the development project for Khedival [downtown] Cairo. … The governorate is working
hard to provide an alternative to the licensed riverboat owners who have been
transferred to al-Sahel.”
He
continued, “The alternative location is currently being equipped, so it is
difficult to judge its validity now, but soon the boats will be transferred
there. The governorate will provide all means of comfort and will make sure
that the boats are safe by coordinating with the security forces to protect
them during work.”
Mustafa
dismissed the idea that the project is designed to cater to hotels. "The
only beneficiary is the citizen, who now can enjoy sitting on the Nile Corniche
that has been rejuvenated in a way that impressed citizens and the media.”
He
added, “I call on riverboat owners to give the matter some time until the
alternative location is fully equipped. The face-lift of Cairo will be in everyone’s best interest. Cairo will once again be a magnet for tourism of
all kinds."
Mustafa
stressed that the development will not harm licensed boat owners, only
unlicensed ones who are in violation of the law and are not subject to the
supervision of the concerned authorities.
ElSisi and his government:
mad dogs
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