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UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss to raise Alaa Abdel-Fattah's case with Egypt
UK Foreign Secretary on Tuesday said she was seeking a meeting with her Egyptian counterpart to secure the release of a jailed activist who has been on hunger strike since April.
- a key figure in the 2011 revolt that helped toppleÌýÌýlong-serving President Hosni Mubarak - has reportedly gone 81 days without food.
He was given British citizenship in April through his British-born mother and his family has been pushing ever since for a consular visit.
'For him, the end is either by his release or death - he just can't go through any more.'
— LBC (@LBC)
The sister of activist Alaa Abd El-Fattah - who's on his 78th day of hunger striking - says he was imprisoned in Egypt for sharing a Facebook post. |
Truss told parliament the government in London was "working very hard to secure his release" from a five-year jail term for "broadcasting false news".
A junior foreign minister has met the 40-year-old Fattah's family, she said, adding: "I am seeking a meeting with the Egyptian foreign minister.
"He's due to visit the United Kingdom shortly, and I'll be raising his case."
Fattah has spent most of the past decade behind bars, mainly in the notorious Tora prison for criminal and political detainees.
Fattah's sister Mona Seif said Truss' promise was "an incredible relief".
"We've always believed that, if the FCDO (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) put its full weight behind Alaa, his nightmare would be over," she added.
"But he is on day 81 of hunger strike now and time is running out. I hope they decide to fully commit before it's too late."
The Egyptian authorities have questioned his family's assertions that he is refusing to eat and said it had footage that "disproves" the claim.
Last week Sanaa Seif told a news conference at the UK parliament in London that her brother began his protest drinking only water and rehydration salts.
But on day 55 he started taking in 100 calories a day "to gain us more time in the campaign for his release".
Abdel-Fattah, 40, a blogger and hero of the 2011 Egyptian revolution, is serving five years in jail for "broadcasting false news" after he shared a Facebook post.
Rights groups denounced his trial as unjust and Amnesty International considers the computer programmer, who was convicted in December after being held for over two years, a prisoner of conscience.
Abdel-Fattah was previously imprisoned between 2013 and 2019 and was not out long before being rearrested.