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Egypt Agrees To Deport U.S. Citizen Sentenced For Protests

A photo from March shows Mohammed Soltan being pushed by his father Salah during a court appearance in Cairo, Egypt. Soltan, a dual U.S.-Egyptian citizen, was ordered deported to the U.S. after a prolonged hunger strike protesting his prison conditions.
Heba Elkholy AP
A photo from March shows Mohammed Soltan being pushed by his father Salah during a court appearance in Cairo, Egypt. Soltan, a dual U.S.-Egyptian citizen, was ordered deported to the U.S. after a prolonged hunger strike protesting his prison conditions.

A dual U.S.-Egyptian citizen who spent nearly two years in prison after being swept up in a crackdown on the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood movement has been released and will be deported to the United States.

Mohamed Soltan, 27, was sentenced for helping finance anti-government protests and for spreading "false news."

He had reportedly been on a hunger strike for 489 days and was arrested in August 2013. In April, the Ohio State University graduate was sentenced to life in prison for his support of protests organized after the elected government of President Mohammed Morsi was ousted from power.

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His family credited the U.S. government with securing his deportation. As part of the deal, Mohamed was required to renounce his Egyptian citizenship. Mohamed's attorney, Halem Henish, was quoted as saying that the deportation was delayed because "Soltan absolutely rejected the idea of giving up his Egyptian nationality."

"We are incredibly happy to confirm that Mohamed is on his way home after nearly two years in captivity," Soltan's family said in a statement. "He will receive medical treatment as soon as he arrives on U.S. soil."

"After spending several hundred days on hunger strike, and many months in solitary confinement, Mohammed's health is dire," his family said. "He will receive medical treatment as soon as he arrives on U.S. soil and will spend the immediate future with his family recovering."

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