A British-Mistress’s mother imprisoned in Egypt has declared He is ready to die On hunger strike to secure your release.
Laila Soif, while speaking from the bed of her hospital, urged the Prime Minister to intervene and Pressure Egyptian Officers To He is free, Ala Abd al-Fatah, A pro -democracy worker with dual nationality.
In an interview at the BBC Radio 4 program from St. Thomas Hospital in London, Mrs. Sauif said, “My message is: Use my death as a leverage to get Alaya out. Do not let my death be wasted.”
Mrs. Sauf, who is on hunger strike over eight months, has lost 42% of her body weight, now weighing 49 kg. Doctors have warned that he is in danger of sudden death.
He told the broadcaster: “This is something that I do not want to do with enthusiasm.
“Children want a mother, not a notorious mother – whether it is good or bad
In December 2021, Mr. Abd al-Fatah was sentenced to five years in jail for spreading false news, and should have been released last year.
At a conference outside the hospital on Tuesday, Mrs. Soif’s daughter Sanaa Saf said that her mother’s blood sugar was still very low, but she was alert.
She said: “She is fighting and I hope that the Foreign Office uses this time, her body has given us well.”
Ms. Saf said that she was about to fly to Cairo on Tuesday to see her brother, but lived to live with her mother.
He received two letters from Mr. Abd al-Fatah-one of which was “very confused and small”, just saying that “take care of yourself”.
“I’m really worried about him,” he said.
She also said that she wanted to save her mother’s life but considers her situation “as a mother”.
Ms. Saf said: “The only reason she cares about survival.

Ms. Safe accused the Foreign Office of not working very fast and claimed that no one was in direct contact with the Prime Minister’s Office for about three weeks.
He said: “We have been going for hours; they were measuring his vital at some point every 15 minutes.
“I expressed my disappointment that how is it crazy that they (government) are taking the week. They have not told me that they have changed their pace.”
Ms. Saf said: “I think it means she does not have much to say.”
He also urged Foreign Secretary David Lemi that when he protested, he said and limited the Egyptian ambassador to Whitehall.
Conservative former minister Sir John Whitingdale, who is a member of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, told today’s program that Mr. Abd al-Fatah was a “political activist” who “did not commit any crime that we would recognize”.
He said that Mr. Lemi was “vocal” in protest, but since then his action in the government was “just an impact”.
Sir John also told the Foreign Office to change his travel advice from the Foreign Office that there was a risk to warn the UK that they could “dishonest the Egyptian officials”.
“Egypt receives a big income from tourism, a lot of that tourism comes from Britain and I think it can put pressure on it clearly,” he said.