Global Voices

#WelcomeHomeAlaa: Egyptian revolution activist Alaa Abd El Fattah released after five years in prison

Alaa Abd El Fattah and Manal Hassan. Photo by Lilian Wagdy via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)

Egyptian blogger and activist Alaa Abd El Fattah was released by authorities late on the night of March 28 after serving five years in prison for defying a protest ban.

The news broke on Twitter when his sister, activist Mona Seif, tweeted simply: “Alaa is out.” She later delighted her brother's friends and allies by posting a photo of the renowned Egyptian revolution activist playing with his family's dog, Toka, who he met for the first time:

First meeting of Alaa and Toka 💓

Supporters around the world have begun posting photos on Twitter with signs reading “Welcome Home Alaa!”:

The feminist organization “si jeunesse savait” [“if youth knew”] celebrates Alaa’s return home

Alaa was a leading voice among Egyptian bloggers and technology activists in Cairo approaching and during the Egyptian Revolution. Together with his wife, Manal Hassan, he helped develop on a range of technology and political activism projects working with activists and bloggers in the region and beyond, including with many members of the Global Voices community.

The 37-year-old activist was arrested and taken from his family’s home in November 2013. More than one year later, in February 2015, he was finally tried and sentenced to five years in prison for “organising” a protest under a 2013 protest law that prohibits unauthorised demonstrations. While he did take part in a protest against military trials for civilians on 26 November 2013, Alaa had no role in organising it. His sentence was confirmed by Egypt’s Court of Cassation in November 2017.

Clockwise: Sanaa (left) and Mona; Alaa Abd El Fattah with his son Kahled and wife Manal Hassan, Alaa and Sanaa, and Sanaa and Mona. Photo from Mona Seif's Facebook page.

Alaa comes from a family of prominent human rights advocates, including human rights lawyer Ahmed Seif El Islam, Alaa's father, who was jailed multiple times under the regime of Hosni Mubarak. Abd El Fattah’s sisters, Mona and Sanaa Seif, are also human rights defenders who have long campaigned against the military trials of civilians in the country.

Alaa has been jailed or investigated under every Egyptian head of state who has served during his lifetime. In 2006, he was arrested for taking part in a peaceful protest. In 2011, he spent two months in prison, missing the birth of his first child, Khaled. In 2013, he was arrested and detained for 115 days without trial.

Following his release, Alaa will be made to spend every night in his local police station for an additional five years.

For now, however, his family, friends and supporters are relieved to hear that he is out of jail. And so is the Global Voices community.

Originally published in Global Voices.

More from Global Voices

Global Voices4 min read
Bassirou Diomaye Faye: An Overview Of Senegal’s Youngest Ever Leader
Elected president of Senegal on March 24, 2024, Bassirou Diomaye Faye has become the youngest president in the country’s history at just 44 years of age.
Global Voices4 min readSecurity
Tanzania’s New VPN Policy Leaves LGBTQ+ Individuals Exposed
Opponents of the Tanzania Communications Regulatory Authority's new VPN registration requirement argue that it threatens freedom of expression and other rights enshrined in Tanzania’s Constitution.
Global Voices7 min read
Rains, Destruction And Deaths In The South Of Brazil Demand A New Term To Define A Climate Catastrophe
In May 4, 2024 while the world and the rest of Brazil reacted to free Madonna's concert in Rio, "gaúchos" had a night of terror, with people on their roofs, under the rain, waiting to be rescued.

Related Books & Audiobooks