Egypt’s human rights landscape has grown increasingly bleak following the referral of political activist Anas Habib and 49 other citizens to the Criminal Court, in a new case that reflects the expanding use of judicial tools to restrict civic engagement and pursue political opponents.
Case No. 1282 of 2024 has not been presented as a clearly defined criminal incident. Rather, it falls within a pattern in which vague, politically driven accusations are routinely used to criminalise public expression, particularly when that expression occurs beyond the boundaries of internal state control.
Although the charges relate to “leadership,” “financing,” and “establishing a group in violation of the law,” the nature of Habib’s activity — producing critical content online and conducting symbolic protests outside embassies — indicates that the core of the case concerns restricting his digital influence, rather than any violent or inciting conduct.
The repercussions extend beyond those directly referred to trial. The arrest of Habib’s uncle, Mukhtar Tayel, and later his son, illustrates an alarming pattern in which legal procedures are used as family-based pressure, undermining the principle of individual criminal responsibility.
These developments come amid a broader context of declining fair trial guarantees, where dozens of defendants are referred to court without clear notification of hearing dates and without full access to defence rights. This raises serious concerns about the independence of investigations and the credibility of the evidence presented — concerns heightened by the repeated involvement of the State Security apparatus and charges of joining ill-defined or unidentified entities.
The international dimension of the case further complicates the situation. The detention of Habib and his brother in Brussels during an official visit by the Egyptian president, and subsequent attempts in the Netherlands to restrict his approach to the Egyptian embassy, suggest a trajectory that transcends geographic borders. These actions treat peaceful political opposition abroad as a security threat warranting pursuit wherever it appears. When combined with domestic actions targeting relatives, this cross-border tendency reveals a systematic approach that criminalises protest — even when symbolic and entirely peaceful.
The case marks a clear indicator of the ongoing erosion of public freedoms in Egypt and the shrinking space for political debate in favour of security-based responses that restrict activists and anyone engaged in public activity that diverges from the official line.
In the absence of guarantees of public trials and amid the continued use of prolonged pretrial detention across interconnected cases, the message delivered to actors in the public sphere is clearer than ever: criticism — wherever it originates — may place individuals and those around them squarely within the target zone of prosecution.

























