Joint appeal for Alaa Abd el-Fattah

17 freedom of expression and human rights organisations have written to Prime Minister Keir Starmer to jointly call for the UK to intensify efforts to secure British-Egyptian writer Alaa Abd el-Fattah’s release.

#FreeAlaa


Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer MP
10 Downing Street
London
United Kingdom
SW1A 2AB

14 March 2025 

Dear Prime Minister, 

We, the undersigned 17 freedom of expression and human rights organisations, are writing to welcome your work to secure the release of imprisoned British-Egyptian writer Alaa Abd el-Fattah and to urge you to continue to intensify these efforts. 

We welcome your attention to Alaa’s case – in particular your call to President Sisi on 28 February in which you pressed for Alaa’s release. As you know, this level of engagement has allowed his mother Laila Soueif to have ‘hope that Alaa’s case might move’ and to move to a partial hunger strike of 300 calories a day.  

We trust that you will stand by your statement in parliament on 26 February where you made a guarantee to Alaa’s mother that you would do all that you can to secure his release. 

The need to resolve this case and secure Alaa’s release remains urgent. Laila has stated that ‘without fast movement on Alaa’s case’ she will resume a total hunger strike. Meanwhile, on learning that his mother had been hospitalised, Alaa himself began a hunger strike on 1 March.  

The holy month of Ramadan offers an opportunity for clemency from the Egyptian government. Last week, 50 Nobel Prize winners, writers, and international organisations wrote to President Sisi asking him to issue a Presidential pardon for Alaa and to ‘signal a commitment to justice and compassion’. 

In your last call with President Sisi, you agreed to speak again soon. We sincerely request that this happens as soon as possible in the hope that it can finally unlock Alaa’s release in the coming weeks. 

Prime Minister, your recent engagement on this case has created an opportunity to see Alaa reunited with his son in Brighton. We urge you to use this chance to do all you can to ensure his long-overdue release. 

Yours sincerely,    

Alejandro Mayoral Baños, Executive Director, Access Now 

Sacha Deshmukh, Chief Executive, Amnesty International UK  

Quinn McKew, Executive Director, ARTICLE 19  

Chris Doyle, Director, Council for Arab-British Understanding (CAABU) 

Jodie Ginsberg, Chief Executive Officer, Committee to Protect Journalists 

Jillian C. York, Director for International Freedom of Expression, Electronic Frontier Foundation  

Daniel Gorman, Director, English PEN 

James Lynch, Co-Director, FairSquare 

Yasmine Ahmed, UK Director, Human Rights Watch 

Baroness Helena Kennedy LT KC, Director, International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) 

Liz McManus, Chairperson, Irish PEN / PEN na hÉireann 

Jim Killock, Executive Director, Open Rights Group 

Liesl Gerntholtz, Managing Director, PEN/Barbey Freedom to Write Center, PEN America 

Grace Westcott, President, PEN Canada 

Romana Cacchioli, Executive Director, PEN International  

Fiona O’Brien, UK Director, Reporters Without Borders 

Menna Elfyn, President, Wales PEN Cymru 

PEN Perth letters sent in support

In March 2025, PEN Perth sent a letter to Senator the Hon Penny Wong and to His Excellency The Honourable Stephen Smith, highlighting Alaa Abd el-Fattah’s ongoing incarceration, acknowledging the work already done, and encouraging ongoing commitment to follow up to secure his release.

Letter to Penny Wong

Letter to Stephen Smith