‘Time for him to be free:’ Egyptian-British activist Alaa Abdel-Fattah's fate unclear as 5-year sentence nears end

‘Time for him to be free:’ Egyptian-British activist Alaa Abdel-Fattah's fate unclear as 5-year sentence nears end
Over the past decade, Abdel-Fattah's imprisonment has been met with international outcry with attempts to secure his early release all reaching deadlock.
4 min read
Egypt - Cairo
25 September, 2024
Alaa Abdel-Fattah was one of the leading figures in the 25 January Revolution of 2011. [Getty]

The fate of jailed Egyptian-British political activist Alaa Abdel-Fattah, whose term is technically due in Egypt on 29 September, remains uncertain as his family appeals to the UK government to . 

Officially, Abdel-Fattah will not be released any time soon, which, according to his family and lawyers, is "illegal."

"The release day they are giving for Alaa is January 2027, but the law says the two years he spent in pre-trial detention must be counted so he should be released next week," Abdel-Fattah’s aunt, award-winning British-Egyptian novelist, Ahdaf Soueif, told .

On 21 September, Abdel-Fattah’s lawyer and mother, Laila Soueif, filed a petition before the prosecution-general demanding his release on Sunday.

"When my sister, Laila, and Alaa’s lawyers approached the prosecutor-general's office again yesterday [24 September] to seek answers, the authority told them to check again after 1o days,” said Soueif, the aunt.

The prominent 42-year-old activist, also an author, a software developer and a blogger, was first sentenced to five years in 2014 after being convicted of joining an unauthorised protest and assaulting a police officer, charges he denies.

Abddel-Fattah was rearrested less than a year after his release during his parole in a crackdown that followed rare anti-government protests. After spending two years in pre-trial detention, he was found guilty of "spreading false news" among other charges over sharing a social media post about alleged police brutality.

The Egyptian criminal procedures law dictates that the duration a detainee spends in detention before trial is deducted from the sentence, as long as the defendant has not been convicted of any other legal offences during this time.

"It is legally justifiable to count the time Alaa Abdel-Fattah had spent in pre-trial detention as part of his verdict," high-profile lawyer Khaled Ali, representing Abdel-Fattah, said in a  on his Facebook page.

Abdel-Fattah and his two sisters, Sana and Mona Seif, originally Egyptian nationals, had been  UK passports for being the children of a British-born mother, , a mathematics professor and activist, who has for decades been fighting for the independence of Egypt’s academic institutions.

Local and international rights groups have repeatedly accused Egypt’s government under President al-Sisi of overseeing the  in decades, with thousands of his critics currently behind bars.

Abdel-Fattah was a leading figure in the 2011 revolution, mobilising young people in the uprising that unseated long-time . He is also the son of the late renowned human rights lawyer  dubbed "the advocate the poor's advocate." 

Over the past decade, Abdel-Fattah's incarceration has been met with international outcry with several attempts to secure his early release all reaching nowhere.

In 2022, Abdel-Fattah went on a hunger strike for nearly six months over his imprisonment conditions, escalating his protest by refusing to drink water during the COP27 UN climate summit in November of the same year.

Activists, meanwhile, took to social media, calling on the British government, to negotiate Abdel-Fattah's release with Egypt.

Celebrated British actor and activist Khalid Abdallah, born to Egyptian parents, called on the UK to ensure that Abdel-Fattah walks free on 29 September.

Abdel-Fattah's family vowed to continue their pursuit to gain his legal rights and, eventually, set him free.

"Alaa spent almost 10 years and a half years between prisons and parole. He is about to complete five years behind bars following a remarkably absurd trial. It is time for him to be free," Soueif, the aunt, said emphatically.