Defenders / Saudi Arabia / Abdulrahman al-Sadhan Case № HM-SA-2018-001
Defender · Saudi Arabia

ABDULRAHMAN
AL-SADHAN

Saudi Red Crescent aid worker forcibly disappeared in March 2018 over an anonymous satirical Twitter account. Sentenced to 20 years in prison in April 2021 followed by a 20-year travel ban; sentence upheld on appeal in October 2021.

Imprisoned Saudi Arabia
Role
Humanitarian worker
Arrested
12 Mar 2018
Held at
Whereabouts unknown
HM-SA-2018-001
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Our Record · Detention

Imprisoned for
Three thousand+ days.

0.+1

Days in prison since 12 March 2018. Counter live · updates daily at 00:00 UTC

Detention timeline · arrest → todayCounter live
12 Mar 2018Seized from Red Crescent offices in Riyadh
12 Feb 2020First phone call to family after 22 months of disappearance
29 Mar 2021Sentenced to 20 years in closed-door trial over tweets
5 Oct 2021Court of Appeal upholds 20-year sentence
15 Sep 2023UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention finds his detention arbitrary
12 Jun 2024Family permitted in-person visit for first time since 2018
12 Mar 2026Eight years in detention; 12 years remaining on sentence
6 Jun 2026Today
Case events · 7 on file
  1. Arrest

    Seized from Red Crescent offices in Riyadh

    State Security agents entered his workplace and removed him without producing a warrant. He was taken to an unknown location and held without acknowledgement of his fate.

  2. Case update

    First phone call to family after 22 months of disappearance

    After nearly two years of incommunicado detention, he was permitted a single short call to his family in the United States. He spoke of torture but was cut off.

  3. Verdict

    Sentenced to 20 years in closed-door trial over tweets

    The Specialised Criminal Court convicted him on charges connected solely to his anonymous satirical Twitter accounts and imposed a 20-year sentence followed by a 20-year travel ban.

  4. Case update

    Court of Appeal upholds 20-year sentence

    The appellate chamber confirmed his conviction in full, prompting a rare public statement of "deep concern" from the United States Department of State.

  5. Case update

    UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention finds his detention arbitrary

    In Opinion 41/2023, the Working Group concluded his deprivation of liberty had no legal basis and called for his immediate release and compensation.

  6. Case update

    Family permitted in-person visit for first time since 2018

    A relative was allowed a single supervised visit at al-Ha'ir prison. He appeared thin but alert; his sister Areej continued to press his case from the United States.

  7. Case update

    Eight years in detention; 12 years remaining on sentence

    He marked the eighth anniversary of his arrest still in al-Ha'ir. No part of his sentence has been commuted; the tweets remain the only evidence the prosecution ever produced.

DocumentedViolations
Arbitrary detention Enforced disappearance Torture Unfair trial
Verified · 12 May 2026HuMENA Editorial
Approved
§ 01 · The case

The arrest, and what followed.

Background and work

Abdulrahman al-Sadhan is a humanitarian aid worker who studied economics in the United States before returning to Riyadh to take a position with the Saudi Arabian Red Crescent Society. Outside his day job he ran two anonymous accounts on Twitter that drew large followings for their dry, satirical commentary on Saudi public life — religious bureaucracy, official corruption, and the intersection of state and clerical power. His identity was never publicly known.

Arrest and detention

On 12 March 2018, agents of the Presidency of State Security entered Red Crescent offices in Riyadh and took him into custody without a warrant. He was driven to an unknown location and held incommunicado for almost two years. He was reportedly tortured, including by beating, electric shock and prolonged solitary confinement. His family in the United States went 22 months without any contact before he was finally permitted a single brief phone call on 12 February 2020.

Conviction and imprisonment

His trial was held behind closed doors at the Specialised Criminal Court. He had no meaningful access to a lawyer. In April 2021 the court sentenced him to twenty years in prison followed by a twenty-year travel ban, on charges of "preparing, storing and sending material prejudicial to public order, religious values and public morals" — that is, his tweets. The verdict was upheld on appeal by the Specialised Criminal Court's appellate chamber on 5 October 2021, drawing a rare public rebuke from the United States.

Current status as of 2026

He continues to serve his sentence in al-Ha'ir prison south of Riyadh. He is now 36 years old; he has been detained since he was 27. Communication with his family in the United States is intermittent and routed through monitored channels. His sister Areej al-Sadhan, now based in San Francisco, has become the public face of the campaign for his release. No part of his sentence has been commuted, and the underlying tweets remain the only evidence ever produced.

Sources on file with HuMENA EditorialReading time · 6 minutes

"They took my brother because he made people laugh at power."
HuMENA Editorial · 2026

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Editorial · Provenance

Compiled by HuMENA's Saudi Arabia research team from primary documentation, public filings, family-supplied legal documents, and confidential partner reporting. Editorial responsibility: HuMENA Editorial Board.

HuMENA Editorial Retrieved · 2026-05-12
Editorial sign-off · published
First published · 12 May 2026  ·  Last verified · 12 May 2026 Take-down requests · takedowns@humena.org
2018 → 2026 · 9 calendar years of detention