Caroline HawleyDiplomatic correspondent
BBC“I am studying methods to get again into life,” says freed British-Egyptian pro-democracy activist Alaa Abdel Fattah, as he recovers from greater than a decade in jail in Egypt.
“I am doing a lot better than I’d have anticipated,” he advised the BBC from Cairo, talking publicly for the primary time since he walked free final month. “Significantly better than most individuals would have anticipated.”
Alaa Abdel Fattah, 43, was Egypt’s greatest recognized political prisoner till 23 September, when he was launched after being granted a presidential pardon. It adopted a protracted marketing campaign by his household – backed by celebrities resembling actors Judi Dench and Olivia Colman – and lobbying by the British authorities.
He is now busy having fun with “the small issues, that are the large issues”: watching his two-year outdated niece, Lana, dance and seeing his 13-year-old son Khaled’s pleasure in music.
“It is these small issues that matter,” he says. “And being immersed in them instantly was superb, is superb. It is nonetheless superb.”
After the darkish days of despair which he suffered in jail, he described the “sensory overwhelm” of being free: feeling Cairo’s solar on his pores and skin, seeing the moon within the night time sky, and receiving hugs from his household after years when the one human contact he had was from guards looking out him.
Getty PhotographsA author, mental and software program developer, Mr Abdel Fattah rose to prominence throughout an rebellion in 2011 that pressured the previous president, Hosni Mubarak, to resign.
He was a well-known face in Cairo’s Tahrir Sq., the focus of the demonstrations, and he gave voice to the protesters’ calls for. He was arrested in October that yr after writing an article in regards to the killing of protesters by the Egyptian army.
In 2013, he was arrested once more and served a five-year sentence. Six months after his launch, in September 2019, he was again in jail – after sharing a Fb put up about torture.
He says the worst circumstances had been in Scorpion Jail – inside Cairo’s Tora jail advanced – the place he was first held.
“It was complete lockdown,” he advised the In the present day programme on BBC Radio 4. “We weren’t allowed out of the cell in any respect – no train hour, no studying, no music, no nothing. And it was damp and underground.”
He was advised by the officer operating the jail that he can be incarcerated indefinitely.
Later he was moved to a different facility with improved circumstances, the place he was allowed books, train and TV – enabling him to look at Premier League matches and cheer on Egyptian footballer, Mo Salah.
However for him, and his household, there was at all times a concern that his imprisonment would by no means finish.
“At one level I drowned in suicidal ideation. It was despair. So I do not know that I coped. However I survived.”
Alaa Abdel Fattah recounted how he practically died in 2022 when he escalated a starvation strike, and gave up even water, till he misplaced consciousness.
“After I got here out of that, I finished the starvation strikes as a result of I used to be a bit frightened of how far I went,” he says.
It led to a “deep change” in him. “I am not 100% positive methods to articulate that change, however I am popping out with a unique power.”
His 69-year-old mom, Laila Soueif, additionally got here near demise and was twice admitted to hospital in London whereas on starvation strike to push for his launch.
Getty PhotographsHe feels “nice aid” that he not wants to fret about her, now that the battle for his freedom is over. And the sensation is, clearly, mutual.
Mr Abdel Fattah hopes to journey again to the UK inside the subsequent few weeks together with his son, Khaled, who’s on the autism spectrum and attends a particular college in Brighton. “I am wanting ahead to going to the seashore with Khaled,” he says. “I have not been to the seashore since 2014.”
It’s not but clear that the Egyptian authorities will permit him to journey. Human rights teams accuse them of systematic repression of peaceable critics with, in accordance with the US state division’s most up-to-date evaluation, “severe restrictions on freedom of expression” and an “setting of impunity.”
Alaa Abdel Fattah’s launch nonetheless leaves hundreds of political prisoners in Egypt’s jails.
As for his personal future as a free man, he isn’t but labored out what comes subsequent – though he says that his days of road activism are “undoubtedly” over.
“I am nonetheless dedicated to a combat and battle for a greater world,” he advised the In the present day programme. “However what this implies and what form it may take, I do not know.”
“I am popping out in to a really totally different world and discovering my place in it, and determining what to do goes to take time, I feel,” he says. “Proper now, I am simply in restoration mode.”


















































