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Starmer criticised for celebrating democracy activist’s return from Egypt

28 Dec 2025 4 minute read
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer. Photo credit: Jack Taylor/PA Wire

Sir Keir Starmer is facing criticism for celebrating the return of a British democracy activist from detention in Egypt in light of his past social media posts.

The Prime Minister said on Friday that he was “delighted” that Alaa Abd El-Fattah, who was released from prison in September after receiving a presidential pardon, had been reunited with his loved ones in the UK.

The sentiment was echoed by Cabinet ministers including Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper and Justice Secretary David Lammy with similar posts.

The Jewish Leadership Council, a charity which represents Jewish organisations across the UK, criticised the “effusive welcome” from the UK government, while senior Tory Robert Jenrick said Sir Keir’s “endorsement” of Mr Abd El-Fattah showed poor judgment given past social media posts that appear to show “extremist” views.

Mr Abd El-Fattah, a British-Egyptian dual national, was detained in Egypt in September 2019, and in December 2021 was sentenced to five years in prison on charges of spreading false news.

His imprisonment was branded a breach of international law by UN investigators, and Mr Abd El-Fattah was released after he was pardoned by Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi.

Labour’s Conservative predecessors had also lobbied for the release of Mr Abd El-Fattah, who was a leading voice in Egypt’s 2011 Arab Spring uprising and went on hunger strikes behind bars.

Sir Keir wrote on X: “I’m delighted that Alaa Abd El-Fattah is back in the UK and has been reunited with his loved ones, who must be feeling profound relief.

“I want to pay tribute to Alaa’s family, and to all those that have worked and campaigned for this moment.

“Alaa’s case has been a top priority for my government since we came to office. I’m grateful to President Sisi for his decision to grant the pardon.”

Shadow justice secretary Mr Jenrick said the remarks constitute a “personal, public endorsement” from the Prime Minister.

“Given Mr Abd El-Fattah’s record of extremist statements about violence, Jews and the police, it was a serious error of judgment,” he wrote.

Mr Jenrick referred to posts online going back as far as 2010 that appeared to be from Mr Abd El-Fattah’s X account but could not be verified by the Press Association.

They include several posts that appear to call for violence towards “zionists” and the police.

In 2014, the blogger’s posts on Twitter cost him a nomination for the European Parliament’s Sakharov Prize.

The group backing him withdrew the nomination for the human rights award, saying they had discovered a tweet from 2012 in which he called for the murder of Israelis.

In his letter to the Prime Minister, Mr Jenrick asked him to clarify whether he knew about Mr Abd El-Fattah’s statements before he posted that he was “delighted” at his release.

“Do you condemn them without qualification, including the endorsement of killing Israelis and ‘zionists’ and the calls to kill police and burn Downing Street?”

He asked if the Prime Minister would “correct the record” and withdraw the “unalloyed endorsement”.

“Nobody should be imprisoned arbitrarily, nor for peaceful dissent. But neither should the Prime Minister place the authority of his office behind someone whose own words cross into the language of racism and bloodshed,” he said.

The Jewish Leadership Council also voiced concerns in the wake of recent antisemitic attacks in Manchester and at Australia’s Bondi Beach.

The council said: “We are appalled by the effusive welcome Alaa Abd El-Fattah has received from the UK government.

“The Prime Minister recently reiterated his determination to root out antisemitism from our country but has now shared his delight that someone who has advocated for killing Zionists has arrived in the UK.

“We know from Heaton Park, Manchester and Bondi Beach that there are those who hear such words as a call to action.

“The Government has celebrated Mr Abd El-Fattah’s arrival as a victory, British Jews will see it as yet another reminder of the danger we face.”

A Foreign Office spokesperson said: “Mr El-Fattah is a British citizen. It has been a long-standing priority under successive governments to work for his release from detention, and to see him reunited with his family in the UK.”


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Fi yn unig
Fi yn unig
19 days ago

A soundbite reply here because there is way too much to pick apart in full. The takeaways from this article are that the Tories supported the release of this man and have now turned as they did on ‘blanket’ 20 mph. Jewish groups have expressed concern, (fair enough), but not the selectively silent Knighted Chief Rabbi in the UK who only intervenes to suit and, right or wrong, this man was imprisoned in Egypt (yes) for ‘spreading false news’, a sentence we could do with here which would result in our threatened next Prime Minister already being behind bars.

Amir
Amir
19 days ago
Reply to  Fi yn unig

Well said. The Deform bots are at it again, I see.

Amir
Amir
19 days ago
Reply to  Amir

You can get the comment deleted but I have a screenshot so I will simply repost.

Mike T
Mike T
19 days ago

The chap’s tweets are utterly abhorrent and indefensible, not to mention that his link to the UK is hilariously tenuous. Starmer continues to shoot himself in the proverbial. After Manchester, Bondai etc (plus the ongoing trial of yet another thwarted, attack in Manchester) it’s in poor taste at best.

Amir
Amir
19 days ago
Reply to  Mike T

Has your hero apologised for his despicable antisemitic and racist bullying behaviour yet? No?. Ok, well we’re still waiting. Meanwhile, you keep finding faults with everybody else. No problem. Except, what your hero did, it’s not much different, is it? Hissing sounds. Hitler was right. You tell how that is different to whatever this guy tweeted. 2 wrongs do not make a right. You need to stop being a hypocrite.

Tucker
Tucker
19 days ago
Reply to  Mike T

We get it Mike, anything that happens to white Jewish people is bad. Genocide against Palestinian people is good in your eyes.

Glwyo
Glwyo
19 days ago
Reply to  Tucker

Let’s understand something: these people are loyal to Zion before all other things. They will turn on their race too in a heartbeat when the mind control rays tell them to. The technique for this is already perfected, just see how many “proud Welsh” people hate Cymru more than anything else in the world.

Stuart D Dangerfield
Stuart D Dangerfield
18 days ago
Reply to  Glwyo

The mind control rays???? 🧑‍🎄😂🧑‍🎄

Johnny
Johnny
19 days ago
Reply to  Tucker

Tucker He comes across as a Pound Shop Mahyar Tousi

Johnny
Johnny
19 days ago
Reply to  Mike T

I wonder if you would have been defending the actions of John Vorster at Soweto and PW Botha at Utenhage during the Apartheid era in South Africa.

Amir
Amir
19 days ago
Reply to  Johnny

I won’t bother, this bot has moved on.

Jeff
Jeff
19 days ago

Same Jenrick that was in a cabinet that stated they wanted him released?

Glwyo
Glwyo
19 days ago

“several posts that appear to call for violence towards “zionists” and the police.”
🥱🥱🥱🥱

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