logo
Politicians, students, 130 former prisoners call for Sisi to release Alaa Abd El Fattah immediately

Politicians, students, 130 former prisoners call for Sisi to release Alaa Abd El Fattah immediately

Mada01-06-2025
Urgent appeals have mounted in the last hours for the immediate release of detained activist and writer, Alaa Abd El Fattah, as his mother Laila Soueif lies in hospital in London, 245 days into a hunger strike.
Egyptian authorities have imprisoned Abd El Fattah since 2019, in what United Nations experts ruled last week is arbitrary detention.
Among those calling for his release are nearly 130 former prisoners, all of whom faced similar charges to Abd El Fattah in relation to their political views, and who issued a statement on Saturday calling for the writer's release 'today, not tomorrow,' in a plea to 'end the suffering of his family and save the life of his mother.'
Soueif's blood sugar dropped dangerously low on Thursday night and she was hospitalized. Doctors say her life is in immediate danger.
The prisoners' statement was shared by activist Ahmed Douma, who spent a decade in prison for participating in protests before he was granted presidential amnesty in 2023, and by lawyer and activist Mahienour al-Massry who was detained in 2018 while advocating for the release of detainees imprisoned for their political convictions.
All signatories to the appeal faced charges similar to Abd El Fattah's, the statement said, including spreading false news, unlawful assembly, joining a terrorist group 'or other charges tied to freedom of expression and public participation.'
The statement voiced deep concern over the decline in Soueif's health. 'In her perseverance,' it read, 'resounds the perseverance of hundreds of families worn down by imprisonment, and the stories of parents, siblings and children who have tried to make their voices heard only to be met with a wall of silence.'
Soueif has made repeated appeals, both to the Public Prosecution and to leaders in both Egypt and the United Kingdom, where she and her family hold second nationality.
In their statement, which remained open for additional signatories, the former prisoners called on authorities to 'reconsider the cases of all political prisoners.'
'We urge the relevant authorities in the Egyptian state to act with the wisdom and responsibility that this critical historical moment demands — and to release Alaa Abd El Fattah, in whatever form they see fit, in a way that befits a strong nation capable of correcting its course without hesitation,' the statement read.
The signatories argued that releasing Abd El Fattah would do no harm to the state, just as their own releases 'have not posed any threat to public safety.' Instead, their release was welcomed both domestically and internationally as 'a reflection of a maturing state that comprehends the moment,' the statement added.
Soueif, a mathematics professor at Cairo University, is on hunger strike to call for her son's release in 2024. The writer's sentence was due to come to an end in September but prosecutors refused the families' petitions to credit the two years he spent in remand detention toward his final sentence.
The Civil Democratic Movement, a coalition of liberal parties, also called for Abd El Fattah's release at a press conference held Sunday at the headquarters of the Conservative Party. The politicians said that the power to release Abd El Fattah lay in the President's hands, urging him to include Abd El Fattah, alongside others imprisoned for freedom of expression, in general amnesty lists released for Eid al-Adha.
Lawyer Suzanne Nady, who was in attendance, questioned what more must happen before Egyptian authorities begin upholding the law. 'We've already exhausted every peaceful route,' she said.
Cairo University students submitted their own urgent appeal on Sunday to university president Mohamed Samy Abdel Sadek to intervene and save Soueif's life, who they said 'continued to fulfill her academic and teaching responsibilities at the university with unwavering dedication, up until the moment she departed for London.' The statement, a copy of which Mada Masr reviewed, called for Abdel Sadek to address the president and relevant authorities to secure Abd El Fattah's release 'in recognition of what [Soueif] offered and continues to offer to the university and Egypt's scientific community.'
Over the past months, Soueif has repeatedly appealed to authorities in both Egypt and the United Kingdom. But 'nothing has changed,' Soueif said in a statement two weeks ago, announcing her decision to resume a full hunger strike after she had temporarily increased her intake to include a 300-calorie liquid supplement daily in March at the advice of doctors.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer last contacted President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi regarding Abd El Fattah's case on May 22. Though Soueif acknowledged Starmer's intentions in her announcement that she would resume a full hunger strike, she concluded that 'nothing is happening' to release her son. 'We have used up more days than we ever thought we had. We need Alaa released now.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Egypt's PM reviews government complaints system responses
Egypt's PM reviews government complaints system responses

Daily News Egypt

time8 hours ago

  • Daily News Egypt

Egypt's PM reviews government complaints system responses

Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly has reviewed a report on the responses of the unified government complaints system to a number of cases in various sectors, his office said in a statement. Madbouly directed that complaints and appeals from citizens requiring urgent attention—such as those related to health, the protection of lives and property, and cases of special need—be given priority. The director of the complaints system, Dr. Tarek El-Refai, presented the report, which detailed the system's rapid response to several humanitarian cases in coordination with relevant ministries and governorates. In the area of protecting lives and property, the system responded to complaints about a diesel leak at a fuel station on the Suez-Port Said road, coordinating with the Ministry of Petroleum and civil defence to secure the area. It also addressed complaints about the 'June 30' axis road, with the Ministry of Transport and the National Roads Company carrying out maintenance and installing expansion joints. Additionally, fences on bridges on the Ring Road and in Rod El Farag were repaired. For medical appeals, the system facilitated treatment for a woman with morbid obesity after she appealed to the president. She was transported from Daqahliya to a university hospital in Cairo, where she underwent successful bariatric surgeries. The system also arranged for a young man with a spinal deformity to have successful corrective surgery at the state's expense. In a case of special need, a girl with a contagious skin disease in Daqahliya who had no shelter was transferred to a hospital for medical care so she could later be placed in a suitable care home. Regarding the maintenance of public utilities, the report highlighted the repair of a broken water pipe in Zamalek, Cairo; the repair of a broken sewage pipeline that had caused water cuts in several villages in Luxor; and the replacement of a burnt-out electricity distribution box in Giza. The system also responded to complaints about clearing waterways, including the Safat al-Awsat drain in Sharqia governorate, which serves 18,000 acres of agricultural land, and a blockage in a covered agricultural drain in Kafr El-Sheikh. In response to complaints about encroachments, the system coordinated with governorates to remove encroachments on state-owned land in Qena and agricultural land in Ismailia, and to shut down unlicensed shops and warehouses in Cairo. Finally, concerning market regulation and commodity availability, the system facilitated the provision of butane gas cylinders to villages in Beheira and Kafr El-Sheikh in coordination with the Ministry of Supply. It also took legal action against a farm in Sharqia for selling live meat for slaughter outside licensed abattoirs and for failing to adhere to health practices, in coordination with the National Food Safety Authority.

Minapharm Majority Shareholder Triquera Partners with Admaius Capital to Drive Global Biotech Expansion
Minapharm Majority Shareholder Triquera Partners with Admaius Capital to Drive Global Biotech Expansion

Daily News Egypt

time8 hours ago

  • Daily News Egypt

Minapharm Majority Shareholder Triquera Partners with Admaius Capital to Drive Global Biotech Expansion

Triquera B.V., the majority shareholder of Egyptian biopharmaceutical leader Minapharm, has secured a minority investment from Admaius Capital Partners in a landmark deal aimed at accelerating the regional and global expansion of Minapharm's biotechnology footprint. Admaius, an Africa-focused private equity firm, joins forces with Triquera to support the continued growth of Minapharm, which operates one of the largest biological drug substance and product facilities in the Middle East and Africa. The company is renowned for its end-to-end capabilities in manufacturing complex recombinant proteins, viral vectors, and advanced biologics, with operations in both Cairo and Berlin. The strategic partnership is expected to fast-track the development and distribution of affordable, high-quality genetically engineered therapies across underserved markets in Africa and the Middle East. It will also focus on expanding Minapharm's licensing of proprietary technologies in monoclonal antibodies, cell and gene therapies, and vaccines—many of which have been incorporated into FDA-approved products. The collaboration includes plans to explore strategic acquisitions of global contract development and manufacturing organizations (CDMOs), further positioning Minapharm as a competitive force in the global biotech industry. Strategic Alignment and Regional Impact Dr. Wafik Bardissi, Chairman and CEO of Minapharm, welcomed the partnership, stating: 'With Admaius, we gain not only capital but a strategic partner whose insight, alignment, and ambition match our own. Together, we are advancing regional self-sufficiency and expanding the global reach of our innovations.' Admaius Capital Partners Managing Partner Marlon Chigwende described the deal as a 'landmark transaction,' adding: 'The founding families have built a unique asset on the African and European continents that combines scale, growth, and impact to fight cancer and other awful diseases.' Ahmed Rady, Managing Director at Admaius, praised the Minapharm team's scientific and operational capabilities: 'This partnership is about scaling a homegrown champion that combines cutting-edge global know-how with end-to-end manufacturing excellence.' Dr. Shaheer Bardissi, Co-CEO of Minapharm, emphasized the broader industry implications of the deal: 'This strategic collaboration with Admaius will accelerate and scale Minapharm's vision of translating cutting-edge scientific innovation into affordable therapies, while advancing global scientific frontiers in immunotherapy and advanced therapy medicinal products.' Advisory Teams Zilla Capital acted as the sole financial advisor to Triquera and existing shareholders, while legal counsel was provided by Matouk Bassiouny. Admaius Capital Partners was advised by White & Case LLP and commercial consultant Arthur D. Little.

Gaza civil defence says Israeli fire kills 16 - War on Gaza
Gaza civil defence says Israeli fire kills 16 - War on Gaza

Al-Ahram Weekly

time16 hours ago

  • Al-Ahram Weekly

Gaza civil defence says Israeli fire kills 16 - War on Gaza

Gaza's civil defence agency said 16 people were killed by Israeli fire Monday in the Palestinian territory devastated by more than 21 months of war. Agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP the dead included five people killed in an overnight strike on a residential building in the southern Gaza district of Al-Mawasi. A pregnant woman was among those killed, the Palestinian Red Crescent said, adding its teams saved the woman's foetus by performing a Caesarean section in a field hospital. Israel designated Al-Mawasi, a coastal area west of the southern city of Khan Yunis, as a humanitarian zone in the early months of the war. Despite that designation, it has continued to be hit by air strikes and now shelters a large share of Gaza's displaced people. All of Gaza's 2.4 million residents have been displaced at least once since the start of the war, and the United Nations says 88 per cent of the territory is now either under evacuation orders or within Israeli military zones. The civil defence spokesman said five people were killed in another air strike in Khan Yunis' Japanese neighbourhood. The Israeli military told AFP it was looking into the Al-Mawasi and Khan Yunis strikes. Bassal said six more people were killed in two separate strikes in Gaza City and central Gaza. Central Gaza's Al-Awda hospital in Nuseirat camp said in a statement that one person was killed and nine wounded when Israeli forces opened fire on Palestinians waiting for aid in central Gaza. The health ministry of Gaza's Hamas-run government said Monday five people had died of malnutrition in Gaza in the previous 24 hours, bringing the total death toll from malnutrition to 147 since the start of the war. After talks to extend a six-week ceasefire broke down, Israel imposed a full blockade on Gaza on March 2, allowing nothing in until trucks were again permitted to enter at a trickle in late May. Stocks accumulated during the ceasefire have depleted, leaving the territory's inhabitants experiencing the worst shortages since the start of the war in October 2023. Follow us on: Facebook Instagram Whatsapp Short link:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store