Journalist, blogger, and producer of satirical television; head of Red Crescent Committee and Civil Society Commission in Ajdabiya.
A journalist and humanitarian coordinator was disappeared for two months, then confirmed detained in a military prison without charge or legal process.HuMENA Editorial
Mansour Mohamed Atti Al-Maghrabi produces "Shatt al-Hurriya," a satirical TV series about everyday life in Libya. Armed men abducted him in June 2024; two months later military authorities confirmed he is held in a General Command prison.
Mansour Mohamed Atti Al-Maghrabi is a journalist, blogger, and television producer based in Ajdabiya, a city in eastern Libya. He produced "Shatt al-Hurriya," a satirical comedy series that depicted everyday life in Libya under its competing governments and armed factions. The series used humour to comment on the frustrations and absurdities of life in a country without unified rule of law.
In addition to his media work, Mansour served as head of the Red Crescent Committee in Ajdabiya and led the Civil Society Commission in the city. These roles involved coordinating humanitarian assistance and facilitating civic engagement in a region controlled by the General Command of the Libyan Armed Forces, led by Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar. His work placed him in contact with vulnerable communities and gave him visibility as a public figure who spoke about social conditions.
On 3 June 2024, armed men abducted Mansour in Ajdabiya. His family was not informed of the reasons for his detention, the identity of those who took him, or where he was being held. No arrest warrant was presented. No official statement was issued. For two months, his whereabouts remained unknown.
On 5 August 2024, a commander in the 302 Brigade of the General Command of the Libyan Armed Forces confirmed that Mansour is detained in one of the General Command's prisons. The commander did not disclose the location of the facility, the legal basis for the detention, or whether Mansour has been charged with any offence.
No information has been made public about the conditions in which Mansour is being held. It is not known whether he has been allowed contact with his family or access to a lawyer. No trial date has been announced. The detention in a military-controlled facility raises concerns about the application of civilian due-process protections, which are routinely denied to detainees held by armed groups in Libya.
The enforced disappearance lasted at least two months. During that period, Mansour's family had no means of verifying his wellbeing or challenging the legality of his detention. Even after the General Command confirmed his detention, no legal proceedings have been documented.
Eastern Libya, under the control of the General Command of the Libyan Armed Forces, has seen repeated cases of journalists, satirists, and activists detained without charge and held in military prisons. Satirical commentary and critical media work are treated as security threats. Detention without judicial oversight, enforced disappearance, and denial of legal counsel are common patterns in cases involving media workers and civil society organisers.
Mansour's role as a producer of satirical content and a leader in civil society made him visible and vulnerable. His detention illustrates the risks faced by those who document or reflect on life under military rule in Libya.
This case file was compiled by HuMENA's Libya 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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