Mohamed Seif Eldin-Cairo

The family of Aisha al-Shater, daughter of engineer Khairat al-Shater, deputy leader of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, is in a state of fear for the fate of her daughter who disappeared about a week ago.

According to a human rights source speaking to Al Jazeera Net, Aisha al-Shater did not attend a renewal session last Monday, as there is no information to her family or lawyer about her whereabouts since about a week.

On October 12, Sarah al-Shater announced that her sister Aisha, detained in al-Qanater prison, was taken to hospital after her health deteriorated due to her hunger strike.

Aisha al-Shater went on strike for the second time because the prison administration failed to fulfill its promises to improve the conditions of her detention.

Since her arrest, Aisha has been held in solitary confinement, with no viable means of life.

In a related context, political and human rights activists launched a campaign under the title "I am on hunger strike" in solidarity with the detainees in the Egyptian prisons, and they launched and Samin under the name "#SaveEgyptian_Egypt", "#SaveEgyptianDetianees."

The campaigners chose November 12 and 13 to coincide with the Universal Periodic Review of Human Rights before the 34th session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland.

Since the 2013 military coup against the late President Mohamed Morsi, local and international human rights organizations have accused the Egyptian regime of expanding human rights violations, especially against political detainees, and of not providing fair trials, but the government has always affirmed its respect for human rights and accuses international organizations of “politicizing” cases. human rights.