Cassation lawyer; human rights defender specialising in the legal defence of political prisoners and civil and political rights advocacy.
Ahmed Nazir El-Helw remains in prolonged pre-trial detention, his health failing and his trial unresolved more than two years after his arrest.HuMENA Editorial
Ahmed Nazir El-Helw is an Egyptian lawyer who has spent much of his career defending political prisoners and advocating for the rule of law. Arrested in late 2022, he remains in pre-trial detention and now suffers from paralysis.
Ahmed Nazir El-Helw is a cassation lawyer with decades of experience in Egypt's higher courts. Born in 1965, he built a reputation for taking on politically sensitive cases, particularly those involving political prisoners and individuals prosecuted under national security legislation. His work focused on civil and political rights, often representing clients who faced charges rooted in their political activities or expression.
Cassation lawyers in Egypt handle appeals to the Court of Cassation, the country's highest ordinary court. The role requires both technical legal expertise and a willingness to navigate a judicial system that has become increasingly aligned with executive authority. El-Helw operated in this environment for years, representing clients whose cases were often predetermined by the nature of the charges and the identity of the prosecutor.
Ahmed Nazir El-Helw was arrested on 4 November 2022 and placed under investigation in Case No. 1940 of 2022, a State Security case. State Security cases in Egypt are prosecuted by the Supreme State Security Prosecution, a body that has been widely criticised for procedural violations, indefinite pre-trial detention, and lack of judicial independence.
He was held in pre-trial detention and subjected to repeated renewals, a practice that has become standard in such cases. Under Egyptian law, pre-trial detention can be extended indefinitely through a series of 45-day renewals, and defendants in State Security cases routinely spend years in detention before trial. El-Helw's case followed this pattern.
He is currently detained in the 10th of Ramadan Rehabilitation and Correctional Complex, a facility located east of Cairo. Conditions in the facility are reported to be poor, with overcrowding, limited access to medical care, and restricted family visitation.
On 4 December 2024, more than two years after his arrest, the Supreme State Security Prosecution referred El-Helw to criminal trial. The charges against him include joining a terrorist group with knowledge of its objectives, financing a terrorist group, spreading false information and data on social media, inciting protests, and misusing social media platforms.
These charges are commonly deployed against lawyers, journalists, activists, and others whose work is deemed threatening to the state. The term "terrorist group" is often applied broadly and without clear evidentiary basis. Trials in such cases are frequently characterised by reliance on coerced confessions, restricted access to legal counsel, and verdicts that reflect prosecutorial demands rather than judicial independence.
El-Helw's health has deteriorated significantly during his detention. He now suffers from paralysis and has lost mobility, conditions that require urgent and sustained medical intervention. There is no public information indicating that he is receiving adequate treatment or that prison authorities have taken measures to address his medical needs.
Denial of medical care is a documented pattern in Egyptian prisons, particularly for political detainees. The lack of timely intervention has led to preventable suffering and, in some cases, death. El-Helw's condition places him at serious risk.
El-Helw's case is part of a broader campaign of judicial harassment targeting lawyers who represent political prisoners or engage in human rights work. Egyptian authorities have increasingly treated legal defence as a form of political opposition, arresting lawyers, freezing their assets, and prosecuting them under terrorism-related charges.
Pre-trial detention in Egypt has been described by international human rights bodies as a form of punishment without trial. The prolonged detention of individuals like El-Helw, combined with poor conditions and denial of medical care, constitutes a serious violation of international human rights standards, including the prohibition on torture and inhuman treatment.
As of early 2025, Ahmed Nazir El-Helw remains in pre-trial detention, his trial ongoing and his health failing. His case exemplifies the risks faced by lawyers who choose to defend the rights of others in Egypt's increasingly repressive legal environment.
This case file was compiled by HuMENA's Egypt research team from primary documentation, public filings, family-supplied legal documents, and confidential partner reporting. Editorial responsibility rests with the HuMENA Editorial Board. Where dates or facts are uncertain, the record errs on the side of the source material and notes uncertainty in the live archive at humena.org.
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