Egyptian authorities have extended the pretrial detention of sixteen Egyptian citizens after they appeared before the State Security Prosecution in Cairo following weeks of enforced disappearance. The detainees had been held in undisclosed locations, without access to lawyers or family members, in clear violation of Egyptian and international legal standards.
The group includes individuals from various provinces, some of whom had been forcibly taken from their homes or places of work by security forces. According to their families, they were subjected to prolonged incommunicado detention, and their whereabouts remained unknown for periods ranging between two weeks and a month.
Upon their sudden appearance before the prosecution, the detainees were accused of joining terrorist groups and spreading false news, charges commonly used by Egyptian authorities in cases involving political dissent or opposition voices. Lawyers and rights groups have denounced these accusations as baseless and politically motivated, often lacking any tangible evidence.
Relatives of the detainees expressed grave concern over the physical and psychological conditions their loved ones may have endured during the period of disappearance. Testimonies from similar cases have previously described torture, threats, and degrading treatment in unofficial detention sites operated by security agencies.
The use of enforced disappearance remains a persistent practice in Egypt, despite repeated international condemnation. Numerous reports over the past decade have documented the systematic targeting of activists, journalists, students, and ordinary citizens, many of whom vanish for weeks or months before being formally charged.
The continued reliance on enforced disappearance and extended pretrial detention raises serious concerns about due process, access to legal counsel, and protection from torture, as guaranteed under the Egyptian constitution and international conventions to which Egypt is a party.
These developments add to the growing body of evidence highlighting the deterioration of human rights in the country and underscore the need for sustained international attention to the practices of arbitrary detention and the erosion of judicial safeguards.