MB Chairman: Islam acknowledges laborers hard work and toil

MB Chairman: Islam acknowledges laborers hard work and toil

Badie, claimed the demand for their rights must be consistent with the need to preserve what remains of the countries enterprises and factories. He emphasized, that it was the homeland’s first line of defense to preserve public funds for the publics’ interest

 In his weekly message titled “Labor Day message to workers” Badie stated that Islam raised the status of the worker and acknowledged that toil and efforts were highly significant in Islam. He asserted that the prophets had all engaged in manual work occupying a close second to faith and worship
“Toil and labor takes top priority in the Muslim Brotherhood’s ideology as it primarily depends on the fact that Islam stresses the importance of gaining, mastering and sacrificing time for the sake of preserving dignity, honor and independence”. As the world celebrates Labor Day and honors workers as the corner stone of civilization, Muslim communities suffer throughout the world   and in Egypt in particular. Workers conditions have been dramatically altered in the social hierarchy and workers have become the lowest wage earners suffering from low-wages, extreme poverty, early retirement and exploitation by wealthy employers
Badie underscored that Islam demands us to pay the hired hand his wages before his work is done. Accordingly UN human rights covenants and the International Labor Organization have addressed workers’ rights without discrimination, providing them with adequate compensation to meet their basic needs for food, shelter, clothing, health care, and personal care, protection from unemployment, welfare and training to acquire skills necessary to meet development
Unfortunately workers in the Muslim communities have been denied these privileges where regimes have advocated privatizing the public sector and selling them to foreigners at the cheapest price
Badie concluded his message stating that “The continued application of the emergency law in Egypt  over   the past 30 years has constituted a serious violation of human rights. Under these laws, laborers were denied their rights in peacefully expressing their opinion in organized demonstrations or strikes. In addition to this they were prevented nominating for trade unions where thousands have been arrested for vocalizing their demands