Palestinian activist lands in France after release from Egypt

Published January 9, 2022
PARIS: Egyptian-Palestinian activist Ramy Shaath holds the hand of his wife Celine Lebrun-Shaath as he arrives at Roissy airport in France on Saturday.—AFP
PARIS: Egyptian-Palestinian activist Ramy Shaath holds the hand of his wife Celine Lebrun-Shaath as he arrives at Roissy airport in France on Saturday.—AFP

PARIS: Egyptian-Palestinian activist Ramy Shaath arrived in France on Saturday following almost two-and-a-half years of detention in Egypt, after his family said he had to renounce his Egyptian nationality.

The 48-year-old was a figure of the 2011 uprising in Egypt and the coordinator of the Egyptian chapter of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel.

A correspondent saw the activist walk out of Charles De Gaulle Airport outside Paris with his French wife, Celine Lebrun.

Shaath said finally being free was “a bit overwhelming”. “I spent the last two-and-a-half years in between a few prisons, a few forced disappearance spots, some of them underground, some of them solely, some of them with huge numbers of people in a very inhumane way of treatment,” he said.

His family said earlier that the son of veteran Palestinian politician Nabil Shaath was on his way to Paris, adding that they were “relieved and overjoyed” at his release after 900 days of “arbitrary detention” by the Egyptians.

But “we regret that they forced Ramy to renounce his Egyptian citizenship as a precondition for his release that should have been unconditional after two and a half years of unjust detention under inhumane conditions,” the family said in a statement.

“No one should have to choose between their freedom and their citizenship,” they said.

Shaath was released on Thursday evening. The Egyptian authorities later handed him over to a representative of the Palestinian Authority at Cairo airport, where he took a flight to Amman, the Jordanian capital, before heading onward to Paris, his family said.

French President Emmanuel Macron on Twitter saluted the Egyptian decision to free Shaath. “I share the relief of his wife,” he wrote. “Thank you to everyone who has played a positive role in this happy outcome.”

Shaath’s wife was deported from Egypt shortly after her husband’s arrest in July 2019 on charges of aiding a “terrorist organisation”.

In April 2020, Egypt placed him on a terror list alongside 12 other people. “They charged me with many things,” said the freed activist.

“They told me one day, ‘You are accused of being part of a terrorist organisation’. And I asked the guy: ‘What was the terrorist organisation?’ He said: ‘Well, we are not going to tell you’.”

In December, five human rights groups had called on Macron to pressure Egypt to release Shaath.

Macron had previously addressed his detention in a news conference in Paris with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in December 2020.

Egypt’s space for dissent has been severely restricted since Sisi took office in 2014.

Rights groups say Egypt is holding some 60,000 political prisoners, many facing brutal conditions and overcrowded cells.

Egypt ranks in the lowest group on the Global Public Policy Institute’s Academic Freedom Index.

Published in Dawn, January 9th, 2022

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