Bangkok Post

Metro typifies deep economic inequaliti­es

- HAMZA HENDAWI PHOTOS BY AP

CAIRO: Cairo’s subway is perhaps the cheapest in the world. For a fare equivalent to 11 US cents, you can ride as far as you want across the overcrowde­d, trafficcho­ked Egyptian capital.

But even that feels like a burden for many of the millions who ride it each day, at a time when Egyptians are scraping to get by, their purchasing power gutted amid painful economic reforms being implemente­d by the government.

The 30-year-old Cairo Metro typifies Egypt’s deep economic inequaliti­es and the large distances between classes.

Unlike subways in New York, Washington, Paris and elsewhere in the world where the well-off and the poor mingle to at least some extent, the passengers who push and shove in and out of Cairo’s metro cars each day are overwhelmi­ngly poor or from the lower middle classes.

Vital for those who take it, the subway is scorned by the upper crust that doesn’t need it.

Its stations and cars are almost bare of billboards because advertiser­s dismiss the passengers as “C Class’’ consumers. Residents of an upper-class district on a Nile island are furiously resisting having a station built in their neighbourh­ood, fearing it will bring a flood of slum-dwellers.

Despite traffic jams greeting those commuting back and forth into the city, there is no talk of extending the metro to the modern suburbs rising in the surroundin­g deserts, where the better-off have been moving for years to escape Cairo’s urban blight.

It is also one place where Egyptians’ economic vulnerabil­ity runs head on into the demands of reform.

The government desperatel­y needs to get its finances in order, unable to afford the billions it spends to keep food, fuel and many services at near rock-bottom prices.

So it has reduced subsidies, increasing fuel prices and devaluing the Egyptian pound, which fell from eight to the dollar to around 18. Economists and foreign donors have praised the moves, which no previous government dared carry out.

But the resulting inflation — currently around 30% — hit hard on a population where few have room to tighten their belts. Nearly a third of Egypt’s population of 93 million lives under the poverty line, earning less than $2 a day. Many millions more hover just above the line, earning only slightly more.

In March, authoritie­s doubled the metro fare from one pound to two.

In dollar terms, that’s actually cheaper. A year ago, one pound equaled about 12 US cents. Now after the plunge in value, two pounds are worth around 11 cents.

But for passengers, who largely earn the same salaries in pounds now that they did last year, the doubling was another painful blow.

Nearly five million people a day in the city of 18 million use the subway. Running along three lines, it is by far the fastest mode of transport, since nightmaris­h traffic can jam the streets at all hours day and night.

Only some trains are air conditione­d, leaving people on other trains sweltering in the punishing summer heat. Commuters sometimes face 15 or 20 minute waits, making packed rush-hour trains even more crowded.

Shouting matches are common, especially since everyone storms in the moment train doors open without letting those inside exit.

At a time when security forces are

in a years-long fight with Islamic militants, metal detectors have been set up at entrances of all stations, though commuters are rarely searched when the device beeps.

Sniffer dogs and policemen, some wearing body armour, patrol stations. Posters of wanted militants are plastered next to ticket booths.

The subway’s trains and 61 stations are depressing­ly bare. There are no street performers or entertainm­ent, no shops and few ads.

But there’s plenty of commerce. Peddlers constantly hawk a wide variety of cheap goods, including eyeliners, knockoff mobile phone accessorie­s, lighters, packets of underwear, molasses candies,

toys, and — for afternoon commuters — fruits and vegetables to take home. They file down the aisles dropping merchandis­e in each person’s lap, then return collecting either money or the merchandis­e.

Beggars pass through as well, some of them children. Many are women wearing the niqab, a veil covering the entire face except the eyes, which gives them anonymity and can win sympathy from religiousl­y conservati­ve passengers.

One woman in a niqab on a recent ride gave graphic details about her daughter’s illness, saying the costs of treatment forced her to beg.

“I would have never asked for your help had I not really needed it,’’ she pleaded.

In the train cars, some read the Quran or pray. Others kill time on mobile phones or mingle and chat, giving the trains the atmosphere of their home neighbourh­oods.

Commuter Dina Abul-Fetouh recalled how once while she was riding in one of the two women-only cars on every train, she got sick with stomach pain and all the women rushed to comfort her.

“When I started crying, the women thought it was a man thing and started telling me he wasn’t worth it,’’ she said laughing.

Despite the crowds, Abul-Fetouh loves the metro.

“Cairo traffic makes me angry, nauseous and it’s a waste of time,’’ she said. “I think I would have quit my job had it not been for the metro.’’

 ??  ?? A man waits for a train at Tura El Balad metro station in Cairo.
A man waits for a train at Tura El Balad metro station in Cairo.
 ??  ?? The ladies-only stop is shown at Mar Girgis metro station.
The ladies-only stop is shown at Mar Girgis metro station.
 ??  ?? A security officer stands guard at a metro station.
A security officer stands guard at a metro station.
 ??  ?? Commuters are reflected in glass ride a metro car.
Commuters are reflected in glass ride a metro car.

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