Software developer, blogger, and digital rights advocate; prominent member of the "No to Military Trials for Civilians" movement.
He expressed severe psychological distress and suicidal thoughts after nearly two years in solitary confinement without trial.HuMENA Editorial
Alaa Abdel Fattah, a blogger and digital rights defender, was arrested in 2019 while complying with probation conditions. He has been held in solitary confinement in Tora High Security prison 2 for nearly two years, facing dire conditions and denial of family letters.
Editorial update · 13 May 2026 — Abdel Fattah was released by presidential pardon on 23 September 2025 after almost six years of imprisonment. His mother Laila Soueif had sustained a nearly 300-day hunger strike to protest his continued detention. On 26 December 2025, his travel ban was lifted and he moved to the United Kingdom to reunite with his family.
Alaa Abdel Fattah is a software developer, blogger, and one of Egypt's most recognized digital rights defenders. He co-founded the Egyptian Blogger Network and developed online platforms that enabled Egyptians to share information and organize during periods of heightened repression. His technical skills and commitment to free expression made him a key figure in the country's early digital activism.
He became a prominent member of the "No to Military Trials for Civilians" movement, which documented and challenged the military judiciary's prosecution of civilians. His activism spanned more than a decade and included advocacy on torture, police brutality, and freedom of assembly. He was a vocal critic of successive governments, including under Mubarak, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, Morsi, and Sisi.
On 29 September 2019, Alaa was arrested at the Dokki police station where he was fulfilling his daily twelve-hour probation requirement. He had been on supervised release following a previous conviction. His arrest came amid a broader crackdown following small protests in Cairo and other cities earlier that month.
Later the same day, his lawyer Mohamed El-Baqer, who is also the Director of the Adalah Center for Rights and Freedoms, was arrested at the State Security Prosecution premises while attending an investigation session with Alaa. Both men were charged under Criminal Case 1356 of 2019 with belonging to a terrorist group, funding a terrorist group, spreading false news undermining national security, and using social media to commit publishing offenses. They were remanded in pre-trial detention at Tora High Security prison 2.
Alaa has been held in solitary confinement in Tora High Security prison 2 since his arrest. The conditions have been severe. He has been denied access to books, time in the prison yard, a radio, warm clothing during winter months, a mattress, and adequate ventilation in his cell. His family has repeatedly been denied the weekly letter that Egyptian law mandates prisoners be allowed to send.
On 13 September 2021, Alaa did not appear at a hearing where his pre-trial detention was renewed for a further 45 days. He was later able to meet with a judge and his lawyer, to whom he expressed severe psychological distress and suicidal thoughts. At that point, he had been in solitary confinement for nearly two years with no trial date set.
Since their arrest, both Alaa and Mohamed El-Baqer have had their pre-trial detention renewed repeatedly by the Supreme State Security Prosecution and the Cairo Criminal Court. The renewals have continued without substantive legal justification and without a trial being scheduled. The practice of indefinite pre-trial detention has become a standard tool for Egyptian authorities to detain activists and critics without conviction.
On 19 November 2020, the Cairo Criminal Court placed Alaa and Mohamed El-Baqer, along with twenty-seven other activists, on Egypt's terrorist list for five years. The court alleged that they had joined the banned Muslim Brotherhood, a charge used broadly against dissidents. The ruling imposed a travel ban and asset freeze for three years. The court also added both men to a new case, State Security Case 1781 of 2019, but the charges in that case have not been disclosed.
Alaa Abdel Fattah's case has drawn sustained international attention. Human rights organizations have called for his immediate release and condemned the Egyptian government's use of counter-terrorism law to silence peaceful dissent. His detention is part of a broader pattern in Egypt in which pre-trial detention, enforced disappearance, torture, and judicial harassment are used systematically against activists, journalists, lawyers, and civil society members.
His case illustrates the Egyptian state's strategy of using vague national security charges and renewable detention orders to bypass the need for trial or conviction. The addition to the terrorist list and the imposition of asset freezes and travel bans further isolate defenders and their families, compounding the punitive effect of detention itself.
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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