'He got books!': Alaa Abdel-Fattah receives first reading material in two and a half years
Imprisoned Egyptian activist has received books, pens and paper and comic magazines for the first time in two and a half years, his family has said.
"People of the world, Alaa got books for the first time in years!" his sister Mona Seif tweeted on Thursday.
"He received the books that his mother gave him, as well as a Mickey [Mouse] comic magazine, a family favourite and longstanding tradition of the Seifs," the family said in a statement released Friday.
However, the statement highlighted other causes for concern since their latest visit this week.
"He still has not been allowed any time out of his cell for exercise, sun or fresh air," it read.
Mark the day: He got BOOKS 🕺ðŸ½ðŸ•ºðŸ½ðŸ•ºðŸ½ðŸ’ƒðŸ’ƒðŸ’ƒ
— Mona Seif (@Monasosh)
50 mins ago our mother finally left Wadi El Natroun prison and is heading back home with a long letter, so we are waiting for a detailed update on Alaa 's health and hungerstrike
But here is what I managed to know very quickly
The activist and writer has been on hunger strike since 2 April, protesting the conditions he and fellow prisoners are held in.
Since the start of the protest, Egyptian authorities have from the notorious Tora maximum-security prison complex to Wadi al-Natrun, where he has been allowed to sleep on a mattress for the first time in years.
Abdel-Fattah remains on strike to protest the conditions of inmates at Tora prison.
However, he has switched to a "Gandhi-style" strike, consuming , by adding skimmed milk and honey to a cup of tea, according to his family.
The average daily calorie intake is 2,000 cal, Alaa continues to refuse food but will start taking 100 cal of fluids a day.
— Sanaa (@sana2)
In hunger strike the body goes into self destruct mode, Alaa is slowing down this process because for the first time in years he's starting to feel hope.
The blogger and activist has spent much of the last decade behind bars. He was most recently imprisoned in 2019, after a crackdown that followed rare anti-government protests.
Abdel-Fattah, a dual UK-Egyptian national, has yet to receive a consular visit from the British.
Local and international rights groups have accused Egypt's government under President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi of conducting the country's worst crackdown on human rights in decades, with some 60,000 of its critics currently behind bars.
Mona Seif °®Âþµº on Friday that "there is no effort or political will from Sisi’s regime to find solutions to the prisoner issue".