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Case file HM-SD-2026-017 · printer-ready
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Case · file
HM-SD-2026-017
Issued · 06 JUN 2026

Ameira Osman Hamid

Engineer and head of the No to Women Oppression Initiative, a human rights organisation campaigning against restrictive public-order laws in Sudan.

Portrait of Ameira Osman Hamid
Portrait · on file
Status
as of 06 Jun 2026
Released (unconditional)
in Sudan
GREEN
[ Identity ledger ]
Country
Sudan
Profession
NGO worker, Women's rights defender
Arrested
Verb. status
Released
First record
She was taken from her home without a warrant, not allowed to bring her medication or walking aid, and held in an unknown location for seventeen days. HuMENA Editorial
HuMENA · for Human Rights and Civic Engagement Living Archive · humena.org/defenders
File HM-SD-2026-017
Issued Saturday, 6 June 2026
Ameira Osman HamidCase file · narrative
§ 01 · BACKGROUND
HM-SD-2026-017Page 02

§ 01Background and the caseEditorial narrative

Ameira Osman Hamid, an engineer and women's rights defender, was arrested from her home in January 2022 by plain-clothed security officers weeks after the military coup. She was released on bail in February.

Background and Work

Ameira Osman Hamid is a Sudanese engineer and the founder of the No to Women Oppression Initiative, established in 2008. The Initiative focused on defending women's rights and building collective responses to gender-based violations in Sudan. Its campaigns targeted the Public Order Law, a legal framework used for decades to police women's appearance, behaviour, and public participation. Women were flogged, fined, and detained under the law for wearing trousers, working in certain professions, or moving through public spaces without male guardianship.

Ameira and the Initiative provided legal support, organised public advocacy, and built coalitions with other civil society organisations. The work was sustained, methodical, and deeply rooted in communities of women who had been targeted by the law. The Initiative also responded to emerging threats, including violence against women protesters during the 2018–2019 revolution and the period of transitional governance that followed.

The Arrest

On the night of 20 January 2022 at approximately 11:30 PM, a convoy of vehicles carrying around thirty plain-clothed security officers raided Ameira's home in Khartoum. No official identification was presented. No arrest warrant was shown to the family. The officers entered the house and conducted an aggressive search. Family members, including children, were present and witnessed the raid.

Ameira was taken from the house to an unknown location. Her family was not informed where she was being held or under what charges. She is partially paralysed and requires a walking aid for mobility. She also requires regular medication. She was not allowed to take either the walking aid or her medication when the officers removed her.

Detention and Health

Her family expressed immediate concern for her health. Her partial paralysis requires ongoing physical support and medication to manage pain and mobility. The conditions of her detention and whether she received medical care during the seventeen days she was held remain unclear. Her whereabouts were not disclosed to her family during the period of detention.

Context and Release

Ameira's arrest took place three months after the military takeover of 25 October 2021, which ended Sudan's fragile transitional government. The coup triggered widespread protests and a campaign of arrests targeting civil society activists, journalists, and women human rights defenders. In November 2021, woman human rights defender Sit Alnfor Ahmed was killed. Ameira had publicly condemned the killing and other human rights violations that followed the coup.

She was released on bail on 6 February 2022. The legal basis for her arrest and the charges, if any were formally filed, have not been publicly disclosed. Her case reflects the broader pattern of arbitrary detention and intimidation used against Sudan's civil society in the months following the coup.

HuMENA · Living Archive HM-SD-2026-017 Page 02 · Narrative
Ameira Osman HamidCase file · timeline
§ 02 · CHRONOLOGY
HM-SD-2026-017Page 03

§ 02Documented chronology2 events on file

  1. 20 Jan 2022Thursday
    arrest Arrested at home by plain-clothed officers Around thirty plain-clothed security officers raided Ameira's home in Khartoum at 11:30 PM without presenting identification or an arrest warrant. She was taken to an unknown location and not permitted to bring her walking aid or medication.
  2. 06 Feb 2022Sunday
    release Released on bail Ameira was released from detention on bail after seventeen days. The legal basis for her arrest and any charges filed have not been publicly disclosed.
HuMENA · Living Archive HM-SD-2026-017 Page 03 · Chronology
Ameira Osman HamidCase file · legal & violations
§ 03 · LEGAL
HM-SD-2026-017Page 04

§ 05Documented violations4 categories

Arbitrary detentionDenial of medical careEnforced disappearanceThreats & intimidation
HuMENA · Living Archive HM-SD-2026-017 Page 04 · Legal
Ameira Osman HamidCase file · provenance
§ 06 · PROVENANCE
HM-SD-2026-017Page 05

§ 06Editorial provenanceHuMENA Editorial Board

How this record was compiled

This case file was compiled by HuMENA's Sudan 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.

Generated
Saturday, 6 June 2026
Source dataset retrieved
2026-05-12
Live record (canonical)
https://dev.humena.org/defenders/ameira-osman-hamid/
Editorial sign-off
HuMENA Editorial Board
Cite this record · Chicago / APA HuMENA for Human Rights and Civic Engagement. (2026). Ameira Osman Hamid [Case file]. HuMENA Defenders Living Archive. Retrieved June 6, 2026, from https://dev.humena.org/defenders/ameira-osman-hamid/

§ 07Take-downs · corrections · partner submissions

HuMENA welcomes corrections, additions, and take-down requests from the defender, their family, or accredited representatives. Material discrepancies are typically addressed within 72 hours.

Editorial · editorial@humena.org
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