Kemi Badenoch: Alaa Abd El-Fattah Should be Stripped of His British Citizenship

The Leader of the Opposition has written a piece for the Mail demanding that Alaa Abd El-Fattah should be stripped of his British citizenship and deported, piling pressure on Sir Keir Starmer. Here’s how it begins:

Two things can be true at the same time.

First, Alaa Abd El-Fattah should have received a free and fair trial in Egypt. The long years of detention, the suffering of his family, and the lack of due process are not things any democracy should be comfortable with. There ends my sympathy.

There is a second truth. The comments he made on social media about violence against Jews, white people and the police, amongst others, are disgusting and abhorrent.

They were also anti-British, which begs the question how officials rubber-stamped this application without escalating to then Home Secretary.

The Home Secretary should now look at all possible options, including whether his citizenship can be revoked and he can be removed from Britain.

British citizenship is more than a passport. It means subscribing to our values. Our country is our home not a hotel. But let’s ask ourselves how this mad situation occurred.

Celebrities campaigned for his release as Western politicians, various media outlets, and human rights organisations helped sanitise El-Fattah’s story. I was only aware of his case in passing when discussed in parliament and on the news.

El-Fattah was always presented as a symbol of democratic resistance. It’s now clear from the comments which emerged that many who were supporting him had brushed aside his own published political views, including explicit endorsements of violence.

Those views were not obscure in those circles. They were serious enough to cost him a major European human rights award years ago.

It is one thing to work for someone’s release from prison if they’ve been treated unfairly as previous governments did. It is quite another to elevate them, publicly and uncritically, into a moral hero.

The British government did not just work quietly for his release, it rushed to celebrate it: our Prime Minister expressed ‘delight’.

This rush to moral posturing has consequences. Firstly, it risks validating the narrative of Western unseriousness. Middle Eastern authorities have repeatedly expressed concerns about the kid gloves with which the West treats extremists who are not allowed to operate within their borders.

There is a deeper problem here which I have spoken and written about frequently.

Too many people now enter Parliament to act as activists and campaigners, not as legislators. This is not about doing the work of a Foreign Secretary on consular cases, or about campaigning for real human rights victims like Jimmy Lai, it is about those who prioritise virtue-signalling over due-diligence.

Those who push colleagues to act quickly, publicly, and emotionally, without doing the hard work of scrutiny that governing actually requires. It is why we have Prime Minister and Home Secretary who signed letters to stop the deportation of foreign rapists and murderers.

That culture in our parliament has consequences. Yes, it is mostly on the left, but let’s be honest, all parties indulge in this nonsense, including on occasion the Conservatives. I recall senior figures in Reform UK, including David Jones, at the time a Tory MP, leading the charge for El-Fattah’s release in Parliament.

It is inconceivable that no one saw Alaa Abd El-Fattah’s published statements over the years. Ten years ago, some people may have dismissed comments advocating the killing of Jews as offensive but unserious, or merely loose talk. After 7 October 2023, that excuse no longer exists. We now live in a very different world.

Since October 7, we have seen a sharp rise in the intimidation and terrorising of Jewish communities. We have seen antisemitic rhetoric translate into real-world harm with violence and murder in Manchester, in Bondi Beach, and elsewhere. In that context, calls for violence against Jews cannot be brushed aside.

I do not want people who hate Britain coming to our country. And where such views are part of an individual’s public record, they must be considered when decisions are taken about citizenship. We have been too complacent for too long.

Another serious problem is that there will be junior officials and decision-makers within parts of the Civil Service who hold these views, or see nothing wrong with them. Some will have absorbed an activist mindset that treats antisemitism as contextual, or worse, morally right. That is unacceptable. This ideology must be rooted out of our institutions.

Worth reading in full.

Stop Press: Sir Keir Starmer is also facing calls from senior Labour ministers to strip El-Fattah of his citizenship. The Times has more.

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Solentviews
Solentviews
3 months ago

Offence archaeologists love going back through tweets from decades ago and running to the (left wing) press. Why are they not doing so now? The crisp salesman, for instance, has seemingly gone all coy.

The hypocrisy of the Left reaches ever greater heights. The deluded fools.

jeepybee
3 months ago
Reply to  Solentviews

They absolutely have gone through his past and they probably agree with him. At the very least they sympathise and believe they deserve the hate.

MajorMajor
MajorMajor
3 months ago
Reply to  Solentviews

Interesting, isn’t it?

Nigel Farage might have said something in schoolboy banter when he was 15 and its main news on the BBC. It is also taken as evidence of his devious, despicable personality. No benefit of doubt, no forgiveness.

This El-Fattah guy definitely said some objectively hateful things, not just once but several times – but, oh, that’s just youthful exuberance and anger. The poor bunny deserves our understanding and sympathy. To the extent that various UK governments intervene on his behalf, grant him citizenship and do the utmost to bring him back to the country he so despises.

soundofreason
soundofreason
3 months ago
Reply to  MajorMajor

…to bring him back to the country he so despises…

I understood he had never set foot in the UK? I may well be wrong…

RTSC
RTSC
3 months ago
Reply to  soundofreason

Correct. He had never set foot here ….. yet he was given British citizenship, no questions asked, and imported …… because according to the Establishment, we don’t have enough violent, anti-Semitic, Britain-hating, self-confessed anti-white racist Muslim Extremists here already.

AynRandyAndy
3 months ago

As I understand it, several Tory MPs and Lords argued for this POS’s release and subsequent importation.

As a question of policy principle rather than conscience, presumably the Nigerian will be kicking those quislings out of the Conservative Party.

No, thought not.

huxleypiggles
3 months ago
Reply to  AynRandyAndy

Good point.👍

Gezza England
Gezza England
3 months ago
Reply to  AynRandyAndy

What you mean like former Tory PMs such as the Lying Oaf Johnson, Sushi and Truss when she was Foreign Secretary. Nice to see GB News unearth a clip of Two Tier eulogising over this scumbag from the Despatch Box.

Jeff Chambers
Jeff Chambers
3 months ago

I’m beginning to think that Starmer-the-Contemptible isn’t really the Prime Minister, and that he’s merely the front-man for someone else. Either that or he hates us, our country, and our people. Or maybe it’s both.

Tyrbiter
Tyrbiter
3 months ago
Reply to  Jeff Chambers

A person with no backbone and flexible principles. Hardly the ‘forensic’ lawyer that he was portrayed as when in opposition.

RW
RW
3 months ago
Reply to  Tyrbiter

El-Fattah’s tweets aren’t particularly outrageous for the standards of the contemporary left. There are seriously many people in Britain who hold such views already. They might even call them British values.

huxleypiggles
3 months ago
Reply to  Tyrbiter

The closest Kneel gets to “forensic” is checking his bank statements regularly.

EppingBlogger
3 months ago
Reply to  Jeff Chambers

All the left hate us.

RW
RW
3 months ago

Just in case somebody wants to know what this is actually all about, the best source I found is the collage at the start of this article:

https://conservativehome.com/2025/12/28/a-no-uk-citizen-left-behind-policy-is-all-very-well-but-the-case-of-one-egyptian-poses-awkward-questions-for-two-uk-governments/

huxleypiggles
3 months ago
Reply to  RW

Much appreciated. So it was the chief idiot Johnson who gave this rubbish citizenship?

Well I’ll go to the foot of our stairs.

EppingBlogger
3 months ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

No. It was a Tory government.

Do not give them the opportunity to pretend it was a single rogue Minister. They try it with Truss, even though she never actually introduced her budget. Many current leading (sic) Tories were in government over those 14 years.

The only ones who tried to stand up for principle were Braverman and Raab. So far as I know. Robert Jenrick I don’t know about. I’ve always been suspicious but some say he’s now sound except for being in the Tory Party.

Heretic
Heretic
3 months ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

Isn’t it hypocritical, though, that so many in the media and public sneer about Boris Johnson committing adultery, while remaining completely silent about Liz Truss committing adultery?

It does show a general attitude of double standards, like those here who applauded the Kurdish Terrorist for burning a Koran outside the Turkish Embassy and shouting “F*** Islam”, calling him “heroic”, while they simultaneously shriek in outrage at anyone criticising Catholicism, and demand that the critic be banned, one even suggesting that the police be notified… on this Free Speech website…

Unbelievable hypocrisy.

huxleypiggles
3 months ago

When was this POS granted British citizenship and on what grounds, my understanding is that he has never lived in this country ?

Mogwai
3 months ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

”He’s just not British, is he? Alaa Abd El-Fattah. That’s what it comes down to.

The state owes its citizens basic consular support, even if they’ve unsavoury views, but this sticks in the craw (understatement) because he’s not one of us.

We need to work out the mechanism by which the political activists in the Whitehall machine contrived to award him citizenship in 2021 when he was in an Egyptian prison, because his grandmother gave birth here while studying. This has nothing to do with Britain or the British government. He hates us.

Clearly a broken system. Dismantle it.

He is only British in the administrative sense: A passport, handed out like confetti, I don’t care about. No one thinks he is British, including him.

Strip it.

If we’re not firm on this, then the broad understanding that we always offer consular support to our own, regardless of views, will fall apart. We should do the same to those whom do not integrate, contribute and commit heinous crimes.

The powers exist. They sit with the Home Secretary. Use them.”

https://x.com/jackmrankin/status/2005245382737965277

AynRandyAndy
3 months ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

HP

According to Connor T, the Egyptian applied for British citizenship in 2021 whilst, in prison in Egypt.

Hmmm . . . which political party was in government at that time?

huxleypiggles
3 months ago
Reply to  AynRandyAndy

Thanks. I’ve just read the link provided by RW. One of the biggest, most dangerous clowns of a PM ever inflicted on this country – Johnson.

Gezza England
Gezza England
3 months ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

His mother is British and these days you do not even have to swear allegiance to this country to become a British citizen. The fly in ointment is that given his extremist views and obvious hatred of this country and Jews, the then Home Secretary, Shitti Patel, could have stepped in to block it.

Mogwai
3 months ago

You need to conjure up the world’s smallest violin when you read this; Responding to historic tweets, Alaa today says: “I am shaken that, just as I am being reunited with my family for the first time in 12 years, several historic tweets of mine have been republished and used to question and attack my integrity and values, escalating to calls for the revocation of my citizenship. Looking at the tweets now – the ones that were not completely twisted out of their meaning – I do understand how shocking and hurtful they are, and for that I unequivocally apologise. They were mostly expressions of a young man’s anger and frustrations in a time of regional crises (the wars on Iraq, on Lebanon and Gaza), and the rise of police brutality against Egyptian youth. I particularly regret some that were written as part of online insult battles with the total disregard for how they read to other people. I should have known better. Looking back I see the writings of a much younger person, deeply enmeshed in antagonistic online cultures, utilising flippant, shocking and sarcastic tones in the nascent, febrile world of social media. But this young man never intended… Read more »

huxleypiggles
3 months ago
Reply to  Mogwai

He’s not one of us. Chuck him out. Send him back to Egypt, they can feed and clothe him.

Mogwai
3 months ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

They don’t want him. There’s Arabs with big accounts on Twitter all saying their countries wouldn’t tolerate this PoS extremist and why is it that Britain hoovers up all the human garbage that they wouldn’t entertain. Meanwhile, this clip of Starmer didn’t age well. Behold, what an epic two-faced git he is. Apparently social media posts are only bad, and worthy of jail time, if you’re white; ”Here is a speech from Keir Starmer about Alaa Abd Fattah that he would sooner forget – “jailed for the crime of posting on social media”. Funny how Starmer is very quick to jail UK citizens for “the crime of posting on social media” yet praises an extremist. Vile hypocrite.” https://x.com/Dahshur11/status/2005336550314553654 Another example. Look at this tweet Susan Hall shared. And Lucy Connolly, Wayne O’Rourke et al got sent down for a single angry non-racist post; ”I’ve been sent this. If this was posted can you imagine the furore if anyone had said this against anyone other than white people. Where is the outrage? Racism should be recognised against white people as well. This man is abhorrent, how on earth was he not checked properly before our government ministers made such fools of… Read more »

Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey
3 months ago

So the political class is happy that a man who wants to kill us into the country. They have exposed themselves for what they are, what more needs to be said about the establishment.

Toby, do you hold your nose when you enter parliament, can you actually bear the stench of the corpse of the UK?

Pete Sutton
Pete Sutton
3 months ago

Alaa Abd El-Fattah… “Alaa” – does he think he’s God or something? Taking Allah’s name in vain!

Heretic
Heretic
3 months ago
Reply to  Pete Sutton

“Allah” is NOT GOD, despite what Muslims claim to westerners.

“Allah” is not an Arabic name at all, but a HINDU SANSKRIT NAME for “KALI-ALLAH” the Giant Moon Spider Goddess of Death, also called “The Mother Goddess of All India”, worshipped along with her Toyboy Shiva/Satan, whose symbol is The Crescent Moon, by millions of Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, Buddhists and pagans around the world.

The Black Cube of Mecca was built upon the foundations of a Hindu Temple to Kali-Allah, under one of her many names “Durga”, the apsidal foundations of which can still be seen to this day, projecting on the ground beside the Black Cube.

Heretic
Heretic
3 months ago

What a striking difference between the articles on this written by Olukemi Olufunto Badenoch, published in the Mail at 10:00 pm, compared to that written by Robert Jenrick, published five hours earlier, at 5:01 pm in The Telegraph on the same day! While the later article by Olukemi Badenoch merely mentions that the Egyptian advocated “violence against Jews, white people and the police”, then goes on to discuss other aspects, the earlier article by Jenrick gives more awkward details about what the Egyptian actually said: “We Britons are “dogs and monkeys” apparently. The police are “NOT HUMAN” and should be “KILLED”. The City of London and Downing Street should be BURNED DOWN. Zionists (aka Jews) should be killed, including USING DRONES TO TARGET THEIR WEDDINGS. The Holocaust didn’t happen. WHITE PEOPLE ARE ‘A BLIGHT ON THE EARTH’ and THERE NEEDS TO BE A GENOCIDE TO WIPE THEM OUT.” “This is a mere fraction of the vitriol that has spewed from the mouth of one Alaa Abd el-Fattah. He’s clearly a man who hates Britain, is an anti-white racist, a rabid anti-Semite, preacher of hate generally and quite obviously, someone we wouldn’t want to ever step foot in our country.” “Indeed if… Read more »

RW
RW
3 months ago
Reply to  Heretic

Thanks for the quotes. While I don’t quite understand (lightly put) why this guy acquired British citizenship while in an Egyptian prison because he’s an Egyptian political activist who fell foul of Egyptian censorship law, or why he’s now in Britain, presumably, at the expense of the government, I’d nevertheless like to argue for a somewhat calmer point of view: This guy posted a lot of seriously questionable shit on Twitter more than ten years ago. So, well, what? He’s a keyboard warrior who already got arrested for being keyboard warrior and I think the sensible policy wrt people shooting their mouths off on the internet while safely sitting at a computer in their living room is “Just let them.” It’s not doing any real harm and – very important point – they’re going to do that anyway, regardless if some of them get punished for it. The people who got jailed or molested by the police for “posting stuff on Twitter” shouldn’t have been and the same goes for this guy. For as long as he doesn’t do anything but spout ineffective verbal venom to anybody who’s willing to listen, it’s best to simply not listen but ignore him… Read more »

Heretic
Heretic
3 months ago
Reply to  RW

“posted ten years ago”… Well, we need to remember that Nigel Farage removed Reform Party candidates who had posted comments in support of Tommy Robinson, or the British National Party, no less than 15 years previously!

RW
RW
3 months ago
Reply to  Heretic

I’ve just skimmed another Guardian article claiming that it was “well-known” that Farage already was a violent Neonazi with history of child abuse at 17 (whatever these two have to do with each other). Farage is obviously bending over backwards to avoid any real ties to someone who’s politically even slightly to the right of Margaret Thatcher because he thinks this will be politically helpful to him.

Insofar I’m concerned, I wouldn’t be bothered ff the Egyptian had posted that yesterday. People post stupid and offensive stuff on Twitter, that’s pretty much the only point of it. For as long as that’s all which they do, I’m all in favour of “let them.” Especially considering that it should be uncomplicated to find a real lot of people with similar views in the swamps occupied by the contemporary left. Exhibit A for this could be the article about Birmingham university yesterday. One more guy joining in these fashionable diatribes isn’t going to make much of a difference.

NB: In my opinion, El-Fattah should certainly have remained in Egypt. But that’s a different conversation.

EppingBlogger
3 months ago

Tories continue to live in a strange world where their 14 years in government and their decade or more before when they chose not to oppose Blair-Brown just did not occur.

The additional funding they received as HM Official Opposition was not spent doing the job. Their 14 years in office were spent opposing Brexit, promoting climate crisis and high taxes and facilitating the sort of decisions which have made this vile man a UK Passport holder.

Now along comes the leader of the Tories. “Nothing to do with us” and he should be deported. Where is the accountability. Where is the credibility.

After three decades playing lap dog to the Blair agenda we will not accept they are fit for government now or ever.

JXB
JXB
3 months ago

“Too many people now enter Parliament to act as activists and campaigners, not as legislators. “

Actually, none of the above. They are there to represent the people, to scrutinise proposed legislation to ensure it is not contrary to the letter or spirit of the Common Law or undermine our Rights under it and Magna Carta and the Great Bill of Rights 1689 – they are there to protect the citizenry from the State.

It is evident none of them know that, instead they protect the State from the citizenry and serve their own interests.

“It is high time for me to put an end to your sitting in this place, which you have dishonoured by your contempt of all virtue, and defiled by your practice of every vice. Ye are a factious crew, and enemies to all good government.

Is there a single virtue now remaining amongst you? Is there one vice you do not process?

So! Take away that shining bauble there, and lock up the doors. In the name of God, go!”

-Cromwell

We would be better off without Parliament and the mockery of democracy.

Cotfordtags
3 months ago

This person was only allowed to claim dual nationality because of the accident of his mother’s birth and the application by another criminal that there should be no suitability test before a child of a British citizen, even one born to a parent who was born here by accident or design, is allowed in turn to claim citizenship. It was that wonderful ECHR that decided we can’t assess before citizenship is allowed. While challenging his right because of what he said, I doubt we will hear much from the leader of the opposition about children having automatic right to citizenship, because it might expose her own journey a bit too much.

Heretic
Heretic
3 months ago
Reply to  Cotfordtags

Hear, hear! Have a look at this fascinating graph by Restore Britain, and notice the spike at 1972-1974, when the three African countries of Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda kicked all the Ethnic Indian Subcontinentals out for taking over everything and treating Ethnic Africans like second-class citizens in their own ancestral homelands. Instead of returning to India, Pakistan & Bangladesh, they all swarmed into Britain.

Restore Britain on X: “Just how many British citizenships are being handed out… https://t.co/NflWlP4Nux” / X

RTSC
RTSC
3 months ago

Perhaps Badenough could explain why the Not-a-Conservative-Party gave him British Citizenship in the first place, and why as Foreign Sec, Cleverly was trying to get him to the UK as well?

They are up to their necks in this disgraceful policy, along with Two-Tier.

David
David
3 months ago

How long will it be before Labour gives him a safe seat in Parliament. And a ministerial post of course.

RW
RW
3 months ago
Reply to  David

Sir Alaa Abd El-Fattah, for services to anti-racism and decolonisation.