Student; graphic design trainee.
Absence does not mean erasure.HuMENA Editorial
Ahmed Hassan was 18 when he disappeared on 1 April 2019, en route to a graphic design course in Cairo. Seven years later, his family still has no official information about his whereabouts.
Ahmed Hassan Mostafa was 18 years old and living in the Al-Moqattam district of Cairo in April 2019. He was enrolled in a graphic design training course, part of a generation of young Egyptians building technical skills in an economy offering few guarantees. On 1 April 2019, he left home to attend the course. He did not return.
His family reported his disappearance immediately. They contacted police stations, hospitals, and detention facilities across Cairo. No official record of Ahmed's arrest, detention, or whereabouts was ever provided. His case entered a legal and bureaucratic void that has persisted for more than seven years.
Ahmed's family pursued every available legal avenue. On 14 March 2020, the Egyptian Administrative Court issued a ruling ordering the Ministry of Interior to disclose Ahmed's location. The judgment was unambiguous: the state was required to reveal where Ahmed was being held and ensure his contact with his family and legal counsel.
The Ministry of Interior has not complied. No information has been provided. No appeal or counter-motion has been filed by the state. The ruling stands, but remains unenforced — a formal acknowledgment of obligation without consequence.
In the absence of official answers, Ahmed's family launched a symbolic initiative they call "Plants of Memory." Families of the disappeared plant trees or flowers in the names of their missing loved ones. The initiative is small in scale but deliberate in meaning: it insists that those who vanish are not forgotten, that their names remain spoken, that memory persists even when the state offers none.
Ahmed's mother has been central to the effort. Like many mothers of the disappeared in Egypt, she has borne the burden of keeping her son's case visible, of repeating his story, of refusing to accept silence as an answer. The initiative has connected families across Egypt who share the same unanswered questions, the same bureaucratic refusals, the same years of waiting.
Ahmed's case is not isolated. Human rights documentation over recent years has recorded hundreds of cases of enforced disappearance annually in Egypt, with thousands documented cumulatively. Individuals are detained by security forces, held incommunicado in undisclosed locations, and denied any appearance before judicial authorities for weeks, months, or in cases like Ahmed's, years. Families are left without recourse, trapped in a legal structure that acknowledges their complaints but offers no remedy.
Egypt is not a state party to the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance. Domestic law does not criminalise enforced disappearance as a distinct offence. The practice continues with structural impunity.
As of 2026, Ahmed Hassan's whereabouts remain unknown. His family continues to demand that Egyptian authorities comply with the 2020 court order and disclose his location. No official information has been provided. Ahmed has now been disappeared for more than seven years.
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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