
Diplomatic agent
Free in the fieldThe body of Laim Soueif is weakening and weak.
The doctors warned that there is a risk of sudden death after eight months of hunger strike.
But the power of her resolution was not reduced at all.
A 69-year-old British-Egyptian mathematics professor talks with the BBC of St. Thomas’ Hospital in London.
But in today’s program, she said she was ready to die to go out of prison from Cairo in Cairo, the most famous political prisoner in Egypt.
Keir Starmer and his government and his government find a way for Egypt to release him and believe that she will continue to refuse calories.
Alaa Abdel Fattah, a British -Egyptian dual citizen, played a prominent role in democratic demonstrations in Egypt in 2011 and has been in jail since 2014.
His latest five -year brother was imposed after sharing Facebook posts about dying prisoners after torture.
Laila Soueif started hunger strike in September 2024. When the son’s sentence is over.
The Egyptian authorities refused to spend more than two years before the trial. And his family is feared that he will be used to setting an example and never solve it.
“He finished his sentence for God. It was an unfair sentence by kangaroo court,” he said. “He would have come from the prison on September 29.”
For several months, she spent only herbs, black coffee and rehabilitation salt. In February, she agreed to consume 300 liquid calories a day after the prime minister asked Egyptian President Abdul Fattah Al-Sisi to release her son.
But on May 20, she resumed the hunger strike and said there was no progress.
Laila Soueif was hospitalized last Thursday and received glucagon, a hormone used to treat severe hypoglycemia.
She is taking electrolyte in the vein. But she is currently refusing to treat glucose. And during the weekend, her glucose level was so low that she could not detect it according to her family.
AFPSanaa Seif said, “No one still understands how she is conscious.” “Very scary.”
She says her mother feels like you’re dying.
“She is talking with us about life after disappearing. She said goodbye.”
Last week, the UN Working Group on arbitral human rights panels, an independent human rights panel, said that Alaa Abdel Fattah was arrested for exercising the right of freedom of expression and demanding an immediate release.
But Egypt, an important ally of England, did not allow the British Embassy to visit him.
His family’s appeal was made by the British government to make more efforts to put pressure on Egypt, and joined by John Casson, an MP of all party parliamentary groups on arbitrary and hostage work.
Free in the fieldWhile opposing opposing, David Lammy, Foreign Minister David Lammy, demanded that Egypt was faced with “serious diplomatic results” and free Alaa Abdel Fattah if Egypt did not give an immediate access to the UK.
“I don’t think the government is strong enough,” said Sanaa SEIF. “ALAA must come out of prison and go out of the country. He must be in Brighton with his son Khaled.”
She is inspired by her mother’s power and she is pleased that hunger strikes have paid attention to the problems of tens of thousands of political prisoners who are believed to have been held in Egypt and the problems faced when they are detained abroad.
“Really, I am really proud of my mother. I am afraid of her. And I was angry because the government, especially the Ministry of Foreign Ministry, wastes too much time.”
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it is doing its best to secure the release of Alaa Abdel Fattah.
The spokesman said, “The Foreign Minister emphasized the urgency of the situation in the phone with his opponent on Sunday morning, and the addition of the Egyptian government’s highest level of participation continues.”
Officials say the prime minister spoke to President Sishi on May 22 and urged him to be released.
When Laim Soueif asked what’s going on, my message replied:










