Current:Home > ContactProminent Egyptian political activist and acclaimed academic dies at 85 -Nova Finance Academy
Prominent Egyptian political activist and acclaimed academic dies at 85
SignalHub View
Date:2025-04-07 20:11:34
CAIRO (AP) — Saad Eddin Ibrahim, a prominent Egyptian-American academic and pro-democracy activist during the reign of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, died on Friday. He was 85.
Ibrahim’s death was announced by Egyptian state media on Friday although few further details were given. The acclaimed academic was a leading critic of Mubarak’s autocratic government and an advocate for the rights of minority groups in Egypt, such as Coptic Christians. He spent most of the 2000s either detained or in self-imposed exile. It remains unclear where he died and what the cause of death was.
Ibrahim was born in 1938 near the northern delta city of Mansoura and turned to a career in academia after finishing school.
In the 1980s he founded two Cairo-based rights organizations: The Arab Organization for Human Rights, and later, The Ibn Khaldun Center for Development Studies. Both were critical of Mubarak’s government and other Arab states.
In 2000, while a university professor at The American University of Cairo, Ibrahim was detained after allegedly receiving funds from the European Union without any authorization from the Egyptian government. In a high-profile trial, he was eventually charged with several offences including the defamation of Egypt’s image and sentenced to seven years in jail. He was later cleared of all charges and released in 2003.
In the years that followed, Ibrahim continued to advocate for democratic reform in Egypt. In writings and speeches he called on the U.S. to make its aid to Egypt conditional on greater political freedoms. Egypt is one of Washington’s top recipients of military aid since it signed a U.S.-brokered peace deal with Israel in 1979.
Ibrahim went into self-imposed exile in 2007 shortly after meeting President George W. Bush and lobbying the former president to pressure Egypt into further democratic reform. The next year, he was again charged with defaming Egypt’s image and sentenced in absentia to two years in prison.
During his years abroad, he taught in America and Lebanon before retiring from academia. He returned to Cairo amid the build-up to the 2011 uprising that became known as the Arab Spring, but he was not arrested.
In an interview with The Daily Egypt in 2010, Ibrahim said that he had come back to Egypt to witness society change. “People are getting ready for a post-Mubarak stage,” he said.
The 2011 protests were built on calls for an end to deep-rooted embezzlement and government corruption. Mubarak had been in power for nearly 30 years in power, but there were growing concerns that Gamal Mubarak, his younger son, would be set up to succeed him.
Following weeks of mass demonstrations and violent clashes between security forces and protesters, Mubarak stepped down in February 2011. He was sentenced to life imprisonment for involvement in the killing of anti-government protesters but later retried, acquitted and released in 2017.
In later life, Ibrahim often gave political interviews to media outlets. He is survived by his wife Barbara, and his two children, Randa and Amir.
veryGood! (5192)
Related
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Shapiro Advisors Endorse Emissions Curbs to Fight Climate Change but Don’t Embrace RGGI Membership
- Bob and Erin Odenkirk talk poetry and debate the who's funniest member of the family
- People's Choice Country Awards moments: Jelly Roll dominates, Toby Keith returns to the stage
- Average rate on 30
- Gypsy Rose Blanchard Granted Early Release From Prison Amid Sentence for Mom's Murder
- Kansas basketball dismisses transfer Arterio Morris after rape charge
- Was Becky Bliefnick's killer a shadowy figure seen on a bike before and after her murder?
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Duane 'Keffe D' Davis indicted on murder charge for Tupac Shakur 1996 shooting
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Things to know about the Nobel Prizes
- Virginia man wins lottery 24 times in a row using a consecutive number
- What is 'Brotox'? Why men are going all in on Botox
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- An ex-investigative journalist is sentenced to 6 years in a child sexual abuse materials case
- Navy to start randomly testing SEALs, special warfare troops for steroids
- IRS contractor Charles Littlejohn accused of disclosing Trump's tax returns
Recommendation
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
Tennessee woman accused in shooting tells deputies that she thought salesman was a hit man
Fourth soldier from Bahrain dies of wounds after Yemen’s Houthi rebels attack troops on Saudi border
75,000 health care workers are set to go on strike. Here are the 5 states that could be impacted.
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Federal judge rejects requests by 3 Trump co-defendants in Georgia case, Cathy Latham, David Shafer, Shawn Still, to move their trials
Kentucky's Ray Davis rushes for over 200 yards in first half vs. Florida
Hasan Minhaj and the limits of representation