Twenty-three Egyptian activists are due to stand trial for breaching a widely criticised law that bars protests unauthorised by the government.
Among those to appear before the court in Cairo on Saturday is 20-year-old Sana Seif, who was arrested on July 21 while peacefully demonstrating against the arrest of her brother, renowned blogger and activist Alaa Abdel Fattah.
Abdel Fattah has since been released, while Seif’s trial has faced repeated postponements.
“We don’t know what to expect anymore,” Laila Soueif, Seif’s mother and an assistant professor of mathematics at Cairo University, told Al Jazeera. “We’ve given up on understanding. If things proceed according to logic, it should be postponed, since the case was referred to a new judicial circuit and a new judge. But our lawyers are braced for all scenarios.”
The family was taken by surprise on June 11 when Abdel Fattah was handed 15 years in prison for violating the protest ban. The ruling came down during the first hearing in his case, and Abdel Fattah was sentenced in absentia while standing outside the court, waiting to be summoned.
On September 15, Abdel Fattah was released on bail pending retrial, just weeks after the death of his lawyer and father, pioneering human rights defender Ahmed Seif. Abdel Fattah and Sana Seif were allowed to attend the burial with the rest of the family.
Sana Seif has entered her 44th day of a hunger strike, aiming to pressure the government to release thousands of people arrested for protesting without permission, and to revoke the draconian legislation. Hundreds of prisoners have joined her hunger strike in jails across Egypt, along with hundreds of sympathisers outside of prisons.
“Her weight has dropped to 46kg, which is low. Her sugar levels are between 40 and 60 mg/dL, which are also low. Her blood pressure ranges between 60/80. Her health conditions are obviously weakening,” Soueif said.
Other prisoners have been facing more severe health deterioration. Ahmed Doma, a prominent activist who is challenging his three-year jail sentence for “thuggery” and breaching the protest law, has reached a critical stage. He started eating again after more than a month of a hunger strike that required him to enter intensive care, his family said, citing information from doctors. Doma is also standing trial on Saturday.
In addition, Egyptian American journalist Mohamed Soltan, who also stands trial on Saturday in a separate case, was taken to El Manial University Hospital in Cairo on October 7 after he was denied proper medical attention at Tora Prison. Soltan, who has boycotted all food and beverages for about 260 days, is said to be bleeding from his mouth and nose while frequently losing consciousness.
Soltan was arrested in August 2013 for documenting violations committed by security forces during a crackdown on vigils staged by supporters of ousted President Mohamed Morsi. Despite being in prison for 14 months, he has not been tried and faces no charges. Appeals for his release have been repeatedly rejected.
Egypt’s anti-protest law, along with a decree allowing the endless extension of pre-trial detentions, have contributed to more than 41,000 people facing incarceration or prosecution.
“Not only [do] the laws need revising, but also the policies of the regime. If the situation in Egypt continues in this manner, if the youth remain targets of oppression, if financial conditions keep getting worse, unwanted clashes are imminent,” Soueif said.
“Some youth will go crazy and resort to violence, something none of us want, but after all, the regime is not differentiating between peaceful demonstrators and violent ones.”