Helen Catt,Political correspondentand
Ian Aikman
Sayed Hassan/Getty PhotographsInternational Secretary Yvette Cooper has launched a assessment into what she calls “severe info failures” within the case of British-Egyptian activist Alaa Abd El Fattah.
In a letter to the International Affairs Choose Committee, Cooper mentioned she, Sir Keir Starmer and Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy “have been all unaware” of Mr Abd El Fattah’s historic tweets, which they contemplate to be “abhorrent”.
It comes after the Conservatives and Reform UK referred to as for the activist to be stripped of UK citizenship and deported after social media posts emerged by which he referred to as for Zionists to be killed.
Mr Abd El Fattah has apologised, saying he understood “how surprising and hurtful” the posts have been.
Sir Keir Starmer has been criticised for saying he was “delighted” by Mr Abd El Fattah’s arrival within the UK on Friday, three months after the democracy activist was free of jail in Egypt.
On Monday, Sir Keir mentioned the resurfaced tweets have been “completely abhorrent” and mentioned the federal government was “taking steps to assessment the data failures on this case”.
“With the rise of antisemitism, and up to date horrific assaults, I do know this has added to the misery of many within the Jewish neighborhood within the UK,” he added.
Conservative shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick, who led the criticism of Sir Keir’s welcome for Mr Abd El Fattah, swiftly responded by renewing his name for the activist to be faraway from the UK.
On Monday night, Reform UK mentioned that it could change the legislation to make sure Mr Abd El Fattah could possibly be stripped of his British citizenship and deported.
The celebration’s chief, Nigel Farage, mentioned earlier Conservative and Labour governments had “opened our doorways to evil folks”.
In her letter to the International Affairs committee, Cooper mentioned work began over the weekend revealed that earlier international secretaries and prime ministers had made public statements on Mr Abd El Fattah’s case “with out all related info”.
She added that present and former ministers have been “by no means briefed on these tweets after they spoke publicly concerning the case”, and the civil servants answerable for the case “have been additionally unaware” of them.
Cooper mentioned it was clear there had been an “unacceptable failure” and that longstanding due diligence procedures had been “fully insufficient for this example”.
The international secretary added she was “deeply involved” that the re-emergence of those tweets, alongside social media posts welcoming Mr Abd El Fattah’s return posted by her and different members of the federal government, had “added to the misery felt by Jewish communities within the UK and I very a lot remorse that”.
She instructed the committee she had requested essentially the most senior civil servant within the International Workplace to assessment the “severe info failures on this case” and the broader methods that have been in place within the division for finishing up due diligence on high-profile consular and human rights instances to verify they have been working correctly and that “all needed classes are discovered”.
Former head of the UK International Workplace, Lord Ricketts, instructed BBC Radio 4’s At present programme: “I feel the place the inquiry want to take a look at, is in these instances the place ministers are going to get entangled, the place officers are going to ask ministers to foyer on behalf of twin nationals then most likely there needs to be background checks, there needs to be due diligence to attempt to keep away from a number of the issues which have cropped up in the previous few days.”
In a single resurfaced tweet, from 2012, Mr Abd El Fattah seems to say: “I’m a racist, I do not like white folks”. In one other, he seems to say he considers “killing any colonialists and specifically Zionists heroic, we have to kill extra of them”.
He’s additionally accused of claiming police don’t have rights and “we should always kill all of them”.
Earlier on Monday, Mr Abd El Fattah “unequivocally” apologised for the tweets.
He mentioned he took allegations of antisemitism “very significantly” whereas arguing a number of the posts had been “fully twisted out of their which means”.
He added: “I’m shaken that, simply as I’m being reunited with my household for the primary time in 12 years, a number of historic tweets of mine have been republished and used to query and assault my integrity and values, escalating to requires the revocation of my citizenship.”
Mr Abd El Fattah ‘s sister Mona Seif described the state of affairs as a “by no means ending nightmare”.
“There’s something extremely heartbreaking and infuriating to be witnessing this vile marketing campaign towards him – and our household – with folks portraying him as one thing fully reverse to who he actually is, and whereas he paid a steep worth for his convictions,” she wrote on X.
The International Workplace mentioned it had been “a long-standing precedence below successive governments” to work for Mr Abd El Fattah’s launch.
The 44-year-old was convicted in 2021 of “spreading pretend information” in Egypt for sharing a Fb publish about torture within the nation following a trial that human rights teams mentioned was grossly unfair.
He was granted British citizenship in December 2021 by means of his London-born mom, when the Conservatives have been in energy.
Shadow house secretary Chris Philp, who was an immigration minister till September 2021, mentioned he was not conscious of Mr Abd El Fattah’s tweets at the moment, however he now believed the activist “ought to have his citizenship revoked”.
“There is no such thing as a excuse for what he wrote,” Philp instructed the At present programme on Monday.
On the identical programme, Labour’s Dame Emily Thornberry, who chairs the International Affairs committee, accused Philp of “throwing concepts round that have been simply not primarily based in legislation”.
“The underside and prime of it’s that he [Mr Abd El Fattah] is a British citizen,” she mentioned.
“He was entitled to British citizenship, he claimed it, so he’s a British citizen. The British authorities has been doing their utmost to get him again into the nation and out of jail.”
A authorities supply mentioned Mr Abd El Fatteh arrived within the nation as a British citizen and there have been no authorized avenues obtainable to dam his entry, even when officers had been conscious of his earlier social media posts.
It’s understood that Downing Avenue believes there’s a excessive bar to somebody having their citizenship revoked as a result of they should have both obtained citizenship by fraud or be deemed to pose a major nationwide safety menace – a take a look at unlikely to be met on this case.
On Monday, the PM’s official spokesman mentioned: “We welcome the return of a British citizen unfairly detained overseas, as we might in all instances and as we now have completed up to now.”
“That mentioned, it does not change the truth that we now have condemned the character of those historic tweets, and we contemplate them to be abhorrent, and we have been very clear about that.”
A author and software program developer, Mr Abd El Fattah rose to prominence throughout a 2011 rebellion that compelled the previous Egyptian president, Hosni Mubarak, to resign.
He has spent greater than a decade of his life behind bars and his launch in September after a presidential pardon adopted a protracted marketing campaign by his household and lobbying by the British authorities.
In October, he mentioned he was “studying easy methods to get again into life” in an interview with the BBC from Cairo.

















































