An Australian journalist on hunger strike
21/1/2025 10:34
An Australian journalist, who
was once jailed for 400 days in Egypt, said he is staging a
hunger strike in London to press the British government to help
secure the release of jailed Egyptian-British dissident Alaa Abd
el-Fattah.
Abd el-Fattah, a software developer and blogger who rose to
prominence as an activist in the 2011 Arab Spring, was jailed
for five years in Egypt over a social media post, a sentence
that followed several previous spells in prison, including
before and after the uprising.
Peter Greste on Monday joined Abd el-Fattah's mother, who
has been on a hunger strike ever since Egyptian authorities
failed to free her son on a scheduled release date of Sept. 29
last year.
The duo demonstrated with placards and pictures of Abd
el-Fattah just outside the entrance to Downing Street as they
sought a meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
Both Starmer and British Foreign Secretary David Lammy have
raised Abd el-Fattah's case with their Egyptian counterparts a
number of times, with Lammy doing so most recently on Thursday,
Britain's Foreign Office said.
"We continue to press on his case at the highest levels of
the Egyptian government," a spokesperson said. "Officials from
the Foreign Office continue to call for consular access to Mr
El-Fattah and for his release."
Greste, who plans to stage a 21-day hunger strike, was in a
neighbouring prison cell to Abd el-Fattah in 2013. Greste had
been accused of helping a terrorist group while on assignment
for broadcaster Al Jazeera, charges he said were bogus and
politically motivated.
"He saved my life. He was an inspiration to me. I want to
now repay what he gave me," Greste told Reuters at the
demonstration, crediting Abd el-Fattah with guiding him through
a "really dark" period in prison.
Egypt's interior ministry did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
Laila Soueif, Abd el-Fattah's mother, who says she has lost
nearly 25 kilograms (55 pounds) in the hunger strike in which
she only consumes water and hydration salts, said she had met
British officials including National Security Adviser Jonathan
Powell to press her son's case.
"I've now become completely fed up," said Soueif, 68, a
mathematics professor. "I almost wish I would collapse and this
thing would get resolved one way or another."
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