Mother protesting by refusing to eat until her son is released from jail.

Laila Soueif has gone without eating for over three weeks and has passed the point of feeling hunger. In London to advocate for the release of her British-Egyptian son, Alaa Abdel Fattah, the 68-year-old math professor remains resolute, stating that she doesn’t feel unwell at all. She began her hunger strike the day after her son’s supposed release from a five-year prison sentence, a sentence that his relatives and human rights organizations believe he should never have received in the first place. Alaa Abdel Fattah, a well-known political prisoner in Egypt, has been incarcerated for most of the past ten years. His mother’s hunger strike, sustained by water, rehydration salts, and sugarless tea or coffee, is a symbol of the increasing desperation felt by his family. “I will continue until Alaa is freed or I am hospitalized in critical condition,” she informs me. “His life has been on hold for 11 years. This cannot continue.”

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