Abbas was born in 1950, in Middlesbrough, in the north of England, to an Egyptian family of Nubian descent.[1] Her mother had worked as a nurse in Palestine before leaving for reasons of safety because of the unrest there; as Abbas shared in an interview:
"Mother’s background was that she was raised in an orphanage in Egypt, and the good thing about being raised in an orphanage, probably the only good thing, was she got an education. So she was able to go to university and qualify as a nurse....
"She was brought to the UK by a major in the British army and his family....They were nice and just wanted to get her into Britain. She went down to London and there she met my dad. Then I know she worked in the health service as a nurse....
"I lost my father when I was very young. My mother raised five of the six of us, because my sister died, as a single parent. She was very inventive, I’ve had a great deal of respect all my life for my mother."[6]
In 1971, she moved down to Birmingham, in the West Midlands, where she joined the Birmingham Black Panthers and taught in the black supplementary school system.[3] Then, in 1971, she went to London, joining the Black Liberation Front (BLF).[4][9] The organisation was affiliated with the International Panther network, and as the BLF's international secretary,[2] Abbas liaised with the US Panthers, developing a lasting friendship with Kathleen Cleaver.[1]
Abbas, together with Bean and Ansel Wong, was in the British delegation to the Sixth Pan-African Congress, which was hosted in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in 1974. The UK delegates' address to the Congress reiterated the commitment of Black Britons to the liberation of Africans, people of African descent, and others throughout the world, from colonial policies, imperialism, and racism.[14]
In 1980, Abbas started the first Black-owned public relations company in the UK and she has worked extensively on public affairs in Africa and the Middle East.[1]
Abbas is among those interviewed in the 2021 film Black Power: A British Story of Resistance, directed by George Amponsah.[15][16] On 13 July 2024, she was a leading participant in the inaugural Black Lives Matter UK Festival of Collective Liberation held at Friends House in London, attended by more than 600 activists and supporters.[17][18]
^Johnson, W. Chris (2019). "7. 'The Spirit of Bandung' in 1970s Britain: The Black Liberation Front's Revolutionary Transnationalism". In Adi, Hakim (ed.). Black British History: New Perspectives. London: Zed Books. p. 135. ISBN978-1-78699-427-1.