Egypt Minister Quits Over Social Class Remarks
The comments on Sunday by Mahfouz Saber brought a heavy
backlash on social media from Egyptians denouncing elitism and what some saw as
the arrogance of Egypt’s judiciary, already under criticism for harsh sentences
against government opponents.
Prime Minister Ibrahim Mahlab said in a statement on Monday
that Saber resigned out of “respect for public opinion”.
In an interview late on Sunday with the private TV channel
10, Saber was asked about charges of favouritism in the appointment of judges.
When he said appointments are made according to objective
standards, the interviewer said: “So the son of a sanitation worker could be
made a judge?”
“Let’s not go too far,” Saber replied. “With all due respect
to cleaners and those above or beneath them, a judge must hail from an
appropriate environment… Thanks are due to a cleaner who raises and educates
his children, but there are other jobs that they can take.”
He said if the children of rubbish collectors became judges
they would face problems and eventually suffer from depression and leave.
On Monday, Shahata Muqdis, the head of Cairo’s rubbish
collectors, told the Youm Al-Sabea newspaper: “The son of a garbage man can be
smarter than your son. And the son of a garbage man won’t be ashamed of his
father.”
‘Realistic comments’
There were multiple calls for Saber’s resignation. A group
of activist lawyers, called Haqaniyah, demanded prosecutors investigate Saber
on criminal charges of inciting hatred and violating the constitution.
Saber’s comments were particularly embarrassing since they
ran contrary to the image that President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi has sought to
promote of himself as a leader championing the poor and marginalised.
One of the main objectives of the 2011 popular uprising that
toppled Hosni Mubarak was social justice.
But little has been done to realise change in what many
Egyptians see as an entrenched classist system in a country where nearly half
the population of 90 million lives near or below the poverty line.
It was Egypt’s 1952 “revolution” – a coup by young army
officers that toppled Egypt’s Turkish monarchy – that first tried to bring a
more egalitarian society.
The coup ended a centuries-old feudal system and introduced
socialist policies. Egypt’s subsequent presidents came from relatively humble
origins – for example, the father of Gamal Abdel-Nasser, who was in office in
the 1950s and 1960s, was a postman.
But it never came close to achieving equality or a
meritocracy in the country. To this day, the judiciary, the diplomatic service
and the officer classes of the armed forces and police are mostly off-limits to
the poor.
During Mubarak’s 29 years in power, inequality spiralled,
with senior government officials and wealthy businessmen forging an alliance
that ignored the needs of the country’s poor.
“The fault is not with the sanitary worker, but with our
classist society,” Radwa Aboul-Azm, content manager at a large media company
and a popular blogger, wrote on Facebook.
“The minister did no wrong. He made realistic comments that
hit us hard over the head. It’s like he slapped us.
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