Ali Bayram dealt with educational activities since the Caucasus and Central Asian Republics obtained their independence in the 1990s. Bayram had to seek asylum in Egypt and passed away in Cairo. According to his relatives, he suffered a partial stroke four months before his death due to a brain hemorrhage.
“He had a brain hemorrhage nearly four months ago,” his family claimed, adding that “His home therapy was continuing and that his health was improving as a consequence of it. However, his left side was paralysed. A doctor was in charge of providing home health care. His speech was likewise shaky at first; however, he regained his capacity to move and talk, which he had lost due to his paralysis during the holy month of Ramadan. Regaining his consciousness, Bayram was conversing with his visitors during Ramadan. For the past two days, he has had a high temperature. When his condition began to deteriorate, the doctor was summoned. ‘There is nothing to do. He died.’.
Dr Bayram, who crossed the Meric/Evros River, moved to Egypt via Greece due to the Erdogan regime’s witch hunt against hundreds of thousands of individuals in Turkey. Due to the Erdogan regime’s ruthless pressure, all Ali Bayram’s family members were compelled to flee to other countries throughout the world, including Egypt and Canada. Saddened by the persecution endured, Dr Bayram was also on the list of those on trial and wanted as part of the ‘Hizmet investigation’.