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Case · file
HM-XX-2026-032
Issued · 06 JUN 2026

Ibrahim Mrikli

Photographer with the Nushatta Foundation for Media and Human Rights, documenting violations by Moroccan authorities in Western Sahara.

Portrait · on file
Status
as of 06 Jun 2026
Detained
in Western Sahara
RED
[ Identity ledger ]
Country
Western Sahara
Profession
Human rights monitor, NGO worker
Arrested
Verb. status
Detained
First record
The charges rest on confessions he says he never made, extracted during an interrogation where his lawyer was barred from attending. HuMENA Editorial
HuMENA · for Human Rights and Civic Engagement Living Archive · humena.org/defenders
File HM-XX-2026-032
Issued Saturday, 6 June 2026
Ibrahim MrikliCase file · narrative
§ 01 · BACKGROUND
HM-XX-2026-032Page 02

§ 01Background and the caseEditorial narrative

Ibrahim Mrikli was arrested in El Ayoun on 15 May 2020 and charged with insulting public servants, stone throwing, and violating quarantine rules—charges he says stem from a coerced confession during interrogation without his lawyer present.

Background and Work

Ibrahim Mrikli is a photographer and human rights defender based in El Ayoun, the largest city in Western Sahara. He is a member of the Nushatta Foundation for Media and Human Rights, a locally based organisation established in 2013 that works on media activism and human rights advocacy in the disputed territory. Through his photography, Ibrahim documents human rights violations committed by Moroccan authorities, including arbitrary detentions, the use of force against protesters, and restrictions on freedom of expression and assembly.

Western Sahara remains a highly contested region. Morocco exercises de facto control over most of the territory, while the Polisario Front and its supporters advocate for self-determination. Human rights defenders and journalists working in the region face sustained surveillance, harassment, and judicial reprisals. Ibrahim's work with the Nushatta Foundation places him at the centre of this environment.

The Arrest

On 15 May 2020, at approximately 11 p.m., Ibrahim was walking to a pharmacy in El Ayoun when he was stopped and arrested by several Moroccan police officers in plain clothes. He was taken to the Security Station in El Ayoun and placed in solitary confinement overnight. He remained in isolation until 9 a.m. the following morning.

Ibrahim was then subjected to an interrogation lasting two and a half hours. During the session, officers physically and verbally abused him. He was explicitly told that his lawyer would not be permitted to attend. His mobile phone was confiscated and searched by the interrogating officers. Ibrahim refutes claims that he made any confessions during this process.

Charges and Release on Bail

On 17 May 2020, Ibrahim was formally charged with insulting public servants, stone throwing, and violating quarantine regulations. The charges were based on alleged confessions purportedly given during the interrogation two days earlier. Ibrahim denies making any such confessions. He was released the same day on bail of 3,000 dirham, approximately 300 euros.

The case remained unscheduled for more than a year. On 8 October 2021, a hearing was set for 6 December 2021. The proceedings have since faced delays, and Ibrahim's legal situation remains unresolved.

Pattern of Reprisals

This was not the first time Ibrahim has been detained on similar charges. In January 2019, he was held for two months. In July 2019, he was sentenced to four months' imprisonment. In both instances, he was charged with insulting public servants and stone throwing. The repeated use of these charges against him suggests a pattern of judicial harassment linked to his work documenting violations in Western Sahara.

Legal Context

The charges of insulting public servants and stone throwing are frequently deployed against activists, journalists, and human rights defenders in Western Sahara. They carry the appearance of ordinary criminal offences while functioning in practice as instruments of political control. The denial of legal counsel during interrogation and the reliance on disputed confessions compound violations of due process in Ibrahim's case.

His arrest during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the inclusion of a quarantine violation charge, further illustrate how emergency health measures have been instrumentalised to restrict the movement and work of defenders in the region.

HuMENA · Living Archive HM-XX-2026-032 Page 02 · Narrative
Ibrahim MrikliCase file · timeline
§ 02 · CHRONOLOGY
HM-XX-2026-032Page 03

§ 02Documented chronology7 events on file

  1. 01 Jan 2019Tuesday
    arrest Earlier detention, two months Ibrahim was detained for two months on charges of insulting public servants and stone throwing. This was the first in a series of judicial reprisals linked to his documentation work.
  2. 01 Jul 2019Monday
    sentence Four-month sentence imposed Ibrahim was sentenced to four months' imprisonment on charges of insulting public servants and stone throwing, marking his second detention in the same year.
  3. 15 May 2020Friday
    arrest Arrested by plain-clothes officers Ibrahim was stopped on his way to a pharmacy at 11 p.m. in El Ayoun and arrested by Moroccan police officers in plain clothes. He was taken to the Security Station and placed in solitary confinement overnight.
  4. 16 May 2020Saturday
    other Interrogation without counsel Ibrahim was interrogated for two and a half hours. He was physically and verbally abused and told his lawyer could not be present. His phone was confiscated and searched.
  5. 17 May 2020Sunday
    verdict Charged and released on bail Ibrahim was charged with insulting public servants, stone throwing, and violating quarantine regulations, based on alleged confessions he denies making. He was released on bail of 3,000 dirham.
  6. 08 Oct 2021Friday
    hearing Hearing scheduled after 17 months More than a year after charges were filed, a hearing was scheduled for 6 December 2021. The case had remained unscheduled throughout 2020 and much of 2021.
  7. 06 Dec 2021Monday
    hearing Scheduled hearing date Hearing date set for Ibrahim's case in relation to the charges of insulting public servants, stone throwing, and violating quarantine regulations.
HuMENA · Living Archive HM-XX-2026-032 Page 03 · Chronology
Ibrahim MrikliCase file · legal & violations
§ 03 · LEGAL
HM-XX-2026-032Page 04

§ 03Charges filed by the state3 on record

  1. 01Insulting public servants
  2. 02Stone throwing
  3. 03Violating quarantine regulations

§ 05Documented violations6 categories

Arbitrary detentionDenial of legal counselDigital surveillanceJudicial harassmentTortureUnfair trial
HuMENA · Living Archive HM-XX-2026-032 Page 04 · Legal
Ibrahim MrikliCase file · provenance
§ 06 · PROVENANCE
HM-XX-2026-032Page 05

§ 06Editorial provenanceHuMENA Editorial Board

How this record was compiled

This case file was compiled by HuMENA's Western Sahara 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/ibrahim-mrikli/
Editorial sign-off
HuMENA Editorial Board
Cite this record · Chicago / APA HuMENA for Human Rights and Civic Engagement. (2026). Ibrahim Mrikli [Case file]. HuMENA Defenders Living Archive. Retrieved June 6, 2026, from https://dev.humena.org/defenders/ibrahim-mrikli/

§ 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
Take-downs & corrections · takedowns@humena.org
Partner submissions (confidential) · partners@humena.org