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Case file HM-EG-2026-022 · printer-ready
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Case · file
HM-EG-2026-022
Issued · 06 JUN 2026

Mohamed Ibrahim

Blogger and YouTuber; founder of Oxygen Egypt, a platform covering human rights and political developments in Egypt.

Portrait · on file
Status
as of 06 Jun 2026
Sentenced
in Egypt
RED
[ Identity ledger ]
Country
Egypt
Profession
Blogger, Digital rights defender
Arrested
Verb. status
Serving sentence
Sentence
Four years in prison.
First record
Detained for complying with police reporting requirements, he was sentenced by an emergency court to four years on terrorism charges. HuMENA Editorial
HuMENA · for Human Rights and Civic Engagement Living Archive · humena.org/defenders
File HM-EG-2026-022
Issued Saturday, 6 June 2026
Mohamed IbrahimCase file · narrative
§ 01 · BACKGROUND
HM-EG-2026-022Page 02

§ 01Background and the caseEditorial narrative

Mohamed Ibrahim runs Oxygen Egypt, a blog and YouTube channel covering rights and politics. Arrested in September 2019 after reporting to police, he was sentenced to four years in prison in December 2021 on terrorism charges.

Background and Work

Mohamed Ibrahim is a blogger and YouTuber who founded Oxygen Egypt, a multimedia platform comprising a blog, Facebook page, and YouTube channel. The platform publishes audio-visual and written reports on human rights issues, political developments, and economic conditions in Egypt. Ibrahim regularly interviews media professionals, opposition members, and human rights defenders, providing a space for critical discussion in an increasingly restricted media environment.

His work is part of a generation of independent digital journalism in Egypt that emerged in the years following 2011, filling gaps left by state-controlled and commercial media outlets. Oxygen Egypt covers topics that are sensitive or ignored in mainstream Egyptian media, including arbitrary detention, forced disappearance, and economic inequality.

The Arrest and Pretrial Detention

On 31 July 2019, Ibrahim was released from Tora Prison under precautionary measures that obliged him to report to a police station twice a week. On 21 September 2019, he complied with those measures and reported to a local police station in Cairo. He was detained immediately upon arrival.

On 8 October 2019, he appeared before the Supreme State Prosecution and was ordered to undergo fifteen days of preventive detention. His detention was renewed on 20 October 2019 for an additional fifteen days, and again on 18 November 2019 for a further fifteen days. On 5 May 2020, the Criminal Court of Cairo renewed his detention, alongside human rights defenders Mohamed El-Baqer, Ibrahim Ezz El-Din, and Mahienour El-Masry, for an additional forty-five days. On 27 October 2020, the Public Prosecution renewed his detention for a further forty-five days.

On 10 November 2020, the State Public Prosecutor accused Ibrahim of involvement in case No. 885 and charged him with joining a terrorist group for the second time. The repeat charge reflects a common prosecutorial practice in Egypt: recycling defendants through successive cases to prolong detention beyond legal limits.

Detention Conditions and Health

On 24 August 2020, Ibrahim's family was informed that he had been transferred from Tora Prison to Al-Aqrab Prison, a maximum-security detention centre widely documented for its inhumane conditions. Al-Aqrab is known for prolonged solitary confinement, denial of family visits, and limited access to medical care.

Since March 2020, Ibrahim has suffered from arbitrary measures in detention that have severely impacted his mental and physical well-being. The combination of isolation, the uncertainty of prolonged pretrial detention, and harsh conditions led him to attempt suicide while held in Tora Maximum-Security Prison 2. The exact date of the suicide attempt has not been disclosed, but it occurred after his transfer to the maximum-security wing.

Legal Proceedings and Sentence

On 20 December 2021, the New Cairo Emergency State Security Misdemeanour Court sentenced Ibrahim to four years in prison. He was tried alongside human rights lawyer Mohamed El-Baqer, who also received a four-year sentence. The verdicts were issued by an emergency court, a parallel judicial structure that offers reduced procedural safeguards and whose decisions are difficult to appeal.

Ibrahim's conviction is based on charges of joining a terrorist group, a broadly defined accusation frequently deployed against journalists, bloggers, and human rights defenders in Egypt. No evidence of violence or operational terrorist activity has been presented in publicly available case documentation.

International Response

Ibrahim's case has been highlighted by international human rights organisations as emblematic of Egypt's crackdown on digital media and independent documentation. His sentencing, alongside that of Mohamed El-Baqer and Alaa Abdel Fattah, has drawn attention to the systematic use of emergency courts and terrorism charges to silence dissent.

Human rights mechanisms have called for his immediate release and for Egypt to cease prosecuting individuals solely for exercising their rights to freedom of expression and access to information. His case remains under review by United Nations special procedures.

HuMENA · Living Archive HM-EG-2026-022 Page 02 · Narrative
Mohamed IbrahimCase file · timeline
§ 02 · CHRONOLOGY
HM-EG-2026-022Page 03

§ 02Documented chronology11 events on file

  1. 31 Jul 2019Wednesday
    release Released under precautionary measures Mohamed Ibrahim was released from Tora Prison under precautionary measures requiring him to report to a police station twice a week.
  2. 21 Sep 2019Saturday
    arrest Arrested while reporting to police Ibrahim reported to a local police station in Cairo to comply with his precautionary measures and was detained on the spot.
  3. 08 Oct 2019Tuesday
    hearing First appearance before prosecution Ibrahim appeared before the Supreme State Prosecution and was ordered to undergo fifteen days of preventive detention.
  4. 20 Oct 2019Sunday
    hearing Detention renewed for 15 days The Supreme Public Prosecution renewed Ibrahim's preventive detention for an additional fifteen days.
  5. 18 Nov 2019Monday
    hearing Detention renewed for 15 days The Supreme Public Prosecution renewed Ibrahim's preventive detention for a further fifteen days.
  6. 05 May 2020Tuesday
    hearing Detention renewed for 45 days The Criminal Court of Cairo renewed the detention of Ibrahim, Mohamed El-Baqer, Ibrahim Ezz El-Din, and Mahienour El-Masry for an additional forty-five days.
  7. 24 Aug 2020Monday
    transfer Transferred to Al-Aqrab Prison Ibrahim's family was informed that he had been transferred from Tora Prison to Al-Aqrab, a maximum-security facility notorious for inhumane conditions.
  8. 27 Oct 2020Tuesday
    hearing Detention renewed for 45 days The Public Prosecution renewed Ibrahim's detention for an additional forty-five days.
  9. 10 Nov 2020Tuesday
    hearing Charged in second terrorism case The State Public Prosecutor accused Ibrahim of involvement in case No. 885 and charged him with joining a terrorist group for the second time.
  10. 01 Dec 2020Tuesday
    medical · event Attempted suicide in detention Ibrahim attempted suicide in Tora Maximum-Security Prison 2 after prolonged arbitrary measures severely impacted his mental and physical health.
  11. 20 Dec 2021Monday
    verdict Sentenced to four years by emergency court The New Cairo Emergency State Security Misdemeanour Court sentenced Ibrahim to four years in prison alongside Mohamed El-Baqer.
HuMENA · Living Archive HM-EG-2026-022 Page 03 · Chronology
Mohamed IbrahimCase file · legal & violations
§ 03 · LEGAL
HM-EG-2026-022Page 04

§ 03Charges filed by the state1 on record

  1. 01Joining a terrorist group (case No. 885, charged twice)

§ 04Sentence

Imposed sentence
Four years in prison.

§ 05Documented violations7 categories

Arbitrary detentionDenial of family visitsInhumane conditionsJudicial harassmentPress freedom violationProlonged pretrial detentionUnfair trial
HuMENA · Living Archive HM-EG-2026-022 Page 04 · Legal
Mohamed IbrahimCase file · provenance
§ 06 · PROVENANCE
HM-EG-2026-022Page 05

§ 06Editorial provenanceHuMENA Editorial Board

How this record was compiled

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.

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

§ 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