logo
Egypt's president ignores Starmer's pleas over mother of jailed activist

Egypt's president ignores Starmer's pleas over mother of jailed activist

The Guardian2 days ago

The Egyptian president is refusing to take a call from Keir Starmer, knowing it will be a plea to save the life of the mother of Alaa Abd el-Fattah, a famous human rights activist and British Egyptian dual national.
Laila Soueif is in St Thomas' hospital with very low blood sugar levels as she suffers from the effect of nearly 250 days on hunger strike.
The 69-year-old is seeking the release of her son, who has spent more than 10 years in jail as a non-violent campaigner for freedom in Egypt. He should have been released in September on the completion of his last sentence. Doctors have warned she is in a highly dangerous condition, and are surprised she is conscious.
It is understood Starmer has been trying to speak to Abdel Fattah El-Sisi ever since she was hospitalised, but after taking two previous calls earlier in the crisis, the Egyptian president is so far refusing to take a third. Starmer last spoke to Sisi on 22 May, and urged him to 'end the anguish of the family'.
A diplomatic source said Sisi is adamant that he does not regard Abd el-Fattah as anything to do with Britain, since he won't recognise his dual citizenship. 'One can only assume he is indifferent to what happens to his mother, but we have been relaying through all the channels available how serious and urgent this matter is,' said one government source.
The UK foreign secretary, David Lammy, has asked for options to be drawn up to demonstrate the UK's anger at what has been happening, but the possibility that any will stick to make Sisi relent seem slim.
The UK has not upgraded its travel advice for Egypt to 'dangerous'.
Starmer has enlisted the help of European allies to put pressure on Sisi to relent.
Sending a message from her hospital bed, Soueif said she was overwhelmed by those who supported her. 'I feel I have reaped what I have sowed hundred fold. All that is asked (of) us is that we don't stop fighting for what is right. We do not have to be winning, but I believe there will come a time when we prevail.'
Laila's daughter, Sana'a, said on Tuesday that the doctors believed her mother may have found a limited pocket of energy. 'She is fighting, and we hope the Foreign Office is using the time,' she said, adding that her brother is aware of his mother's plight.
Sana'a said that along with her sister Mono, they had already told the doctors that if she loses consciousness, they would not ask to revive her.
She explained: 'Our mother has told us: 'I had a good and happy life. I had a good marriage and I had a good job and lived 69 years. I do not want to sit and watch my grandchildren's life be stolen. It has been 10 years'.
'Of course I do not want to lose my mum, but I also do not want her to go through this hospital business again. The only reason she wants to stay alive is us. She really does not want to continue life like this and I understand it.'
She said Lammy had called for the ambassador's access to Whitehall departments to be limited while he was in opposition. 'He was very happy to say this when the Tories were in power, but it is not happening now.'
John McDonnell, the independent MP who has been at the forefront of the campaign to bring the family's plight to parliament, said: 'My concern is that we are running out of time. There is a whole range of things that specialists and diplomats have advised the government to do around trade and travel advice. There do not as yet seem to be any consequences.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Starmer hails Labour victory after surprise win in Hamilton byelection for Scottish parliament
Starmer hails Labour victory after surprise win in Hamilton byelection for Scottish parliament

The Guardian

time18 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Starmer hails Labour victory after surprise win in Hamilton byelection for Scottish parliament

Update: Date: 2025-06-06T07:40:06.000Z Title: Keir Starmer Content: Good morning. Assuming he was not still up at 1.36am, woke to good news this morning – Labour winning the byelection in Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse for the Scottish parliament. It has gained the seat with a 7.4% swing from the SNP. This is a surprise. A week ago the SNP were press releasing a Norstat poll for the Times suggesting they were ahead by 33%, with Labour on 19% and Reform on 18%. And the bookies had the SNP in the lead too. Yesterday one firm had the SNP as firm favourites, followed by Reform, with odds of 11/1 available to anyone prepared to bet on Labour. Perhaps someone has made some good money. For the rest of us, this is a welcome reminder that opinion polls, and bookies' odds, are not always a good guide to results, particularly in byelections. Starmer was criticisised for not campaigning in Hamilton. But he did announce a big U-turn on the winter fuel payments while the campaign was taking place, and that may have helped get his candidate, Davy Russell, over the line. This morning Starmer posted this message on social media. Congratulations to @DavyRussell4HLS and the team on a fantastic victory. People in Scotland have once again voted for change. Next year there is a chance to turbo charge delivery by putting Labour in power on both sides of the border. I look forward to working with you. A win is a win, and this is good news for Labour. But, as the leading psephologist John Curtice has been telling the BBC this morning, the Reform UK vote is significant too. They came from nowhere to a strong third place, with 26% of the vote. The Conservatives, on 6%, only just avoided losing their deposit. Here is our overnight story by Libby Brooks, Rachel Keenan and Severin Carrell I will be posting more reaction to the result, and analysis, shortly. Here is the agenda for the day. 11am: Kemi Badenoch gives a speech where she will say she is 'increasingly of the view' that the UK should withdraw from European convention on human rights. 11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing. If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line when comments are open (normally between 10am and 3pm at the moment), or message me on social media. I can't read all the messages BTL, but if you put 'Andrew' in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word. If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @ The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary. I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can't promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.

Relief for Starmer in Hamilton, but Reform has arrived as a force in Scotland
Relief for Starmer in Hamilton, but Reform has arrived as a force in Scotland

The Independent

time35 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Relief for Starmer in Hamilton, but Reform has arrived as a force in Scotland

When local businessman Davy Russell was announced as the new Scottish Parliament member for Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse in the early hours of the morning, the look of relief on the faces of Labour members at the count was palpable. And they were entitled to revel in what was a shock result. The party had defied the polls and the bookmaker odds to win a seat which in the last Holyrood election in 2021 was easily held by the late SNP MSP Christina McKelvie. Many had the SNP as clear favourites to win the seat again, with the new kid on the block Reform UK as second favourites and Labour expected to come third. The victory was achieved through hard graft and sending teams of MPs and other activists for weeks to campaign hard in a seat which had become an almost existential question for the Labour Party. But more importantly, it had also become a question of whether the Keir Starmer project is working. The seat was for the Scottish Parliament, but its Westminster equivalent is held by Imogen Walker, who won with a big majority last year. She herself is a symbolic figure as the wife of Starmer's all powerful chief-of-staff Morgan McSweeney and parliamentary private secretary to chancellor Rachel Reeves. Defeat in this by-election - and worse still a third place - would have been catastrophic. It would have been portrayed as a rejection of the Starmer-McSweeney approach and triggered fears of yet another wipeout for Labour in Scotland. But what the result showed was that an area that was once a Labour heartland before being split by the left-wing nationalism of the SNP, has now become a three-way marginal. It proved that the allegations of corruption and criminality, which ended the Nicola Sturgeon era of the SNP, have left the Scottish nationalists damaged still. They remain a force but they look as though their dominance in Scottish politics is now on the slide. The SNP showed an incredible amount of hubris in the campaign, with first minister John Swinney even suggesting the by-election was a straight fight between his party and Reform. Even as votes were being counted, senior SNP figures were briefing that Labour had not been able to find anybody willing to vote for them - 'needle in a haystack stuff,' one noted. But in truth, it may be that the SNP helped Labour turn a potentially humiliating defeat into a morale boosting victory. David Mundell, the former Tory Scottish secretary in the David Cameron and Theresa May governments, a highly experienced operator north of the border said: 'If this was an English seat Reform would have won easily but the SNP start with around 30 per cent of the vote.' In the end Labour got 31 per cent, the SNP 29 per cent and Reform 26 per cent. Just a few hundred votes separated them. What it proved is that while Labour are far from being as dead as some presumed, Reform has arrived as a political force in a part of the UK where Nigel Farage had no previous traction. Back in 2013, Mr Farage was literally chased out of Scotland when he tried to hold a campaign event in an Edinburgh pub. Now his party is looking at winning many seats in next year's Scottish Parliament election. It was noticeable on Monday that Farage received a warm welcome in Hamilton when he went to campaign while Sir Keir, just 22 minutes away in Glasgow to launch his strategic defence review, stayed away. The fact remains that the prime minister is personally very unpopular on the doorstep. According to Professor Sir John Curtice, Reform has taken a quarter of Tory votes and one in six from Labour. Victory has handed Sir Keir and his party a much needed boost but it may only mask the oncoming threat of Farage and Reform in all parts of the country. Reform is now no longer just an English phenomenon but one that is going to do the traditional parties damage in Scotland and Wales too.

Llinos Medi MP presses Government on Gaza healthcare system
Llinos Medi MP presses Government on Gaza healthcare system

North Wales Chronicle

timean hour ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Llinos Medi MP presses Government on Gaza healthcare system

Ms Medi, of Plaid Cymru, has also signed a cross-party letter calling for an inquiry into the UK's involvement in Israel's military assault in Gaza. At Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday (June 4), Keir Starmer labelled matters in Gaza "appalling and intolerable", and reiterated calls for a ceasefire. Speaking in Parliament on Wednesday, Ms Medi said: 'We can all see that a genocide is happening in Gaza. It is time the Government called this for what it is. 'We are witnessing the systematic dismantling of Gaza's healthcare system, with Israel recently destroying the only kidney dialysis facility in northern Gaza. 'What is the Government doing to prevent Gaza's healthcare system from being decimated further and to re-establish hospitals and lifesaving medical services?' In response to Ms Medi's comments, the minister for the Middle East, Hamish Falconer, said: 'While the blockade remains in place, there is very little that any outside partner can do to try and ensure proper health services in Gaza. 'I will not mislead the house by suggesting otherwise. 'The aid that has come in from the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation is far too little and far too geographically concentrated to be able to provide the kind of provision that Gazans are entitled to and that they should have, and is a clear necessity under International Humanitarian Law.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store