Chapters
Statement

Marking One Year Since Ashraf Omar’s Arrest

Egypt

Credit: Gianluca Costantini. Image courtesy of artist

Today marks a sad day for freedom of expression. It is the one-year anniversary of the unlawful arrest and “pre-trial detention” of Egyptian cartoonist Ashraf Omar.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

22 July 2025

(PARIS) – On 22 July 2024, a Cairo activist, cartoonist, and translator named Ashraf Omar was taken from his home by plainclothes officers. Forty-eight hours elapsed before there was any official acknowledgment of his arrest or confirmation of his wellbeing or location.

Mr. Omar was subjected to physical violence and verbal abuse, as well as a six-hour interrogation during which he was questioned concerning cartoons that had been published in the independent news outlet, Al Manassa. He was asked why he had drawn them, and whether his intent was to incite dissent in the general population. Ultimately, he was charged with “joining a terrorist group while being aware of its purposes, disseminating and publishing rumours and false news and information, and abuse of social media.”

Placed in “pre-trial detention”, Mr. Omar has spent the intervening year in a cycle of frustrating, cruel, and unjust procedural limbo. Relying on COVID-19 measures that have never been rescinded, his “hearings” take place exclusively over video conference-call with no opportunity for defence attorney and client to confer. Initially every fifteen, then every forty-five days, these brief convenings always have the same purpose: to rubber-stamp another extension without presentation or consideration of any argument or evidence.

In addition, on 16 January 2025, his wife Nada Mougheeth was arrested and charged with “spreading
false rumours” about his arrest and, like him, “supporting terrorism”. She was released on bail. Her arrest was a clear attempt to intimidate her into silence concerning her husband, who may remain a detainee until the end of 2025, with no sign of a trial date.

Presently a total of seventeen journalists are detained in the Egyptian penal system. Charges of
«membership of a terrorist organisation» and «spreading false news» are regularly brought against them. Egyptian authorities exercise censorship over independent media outlets, thereby stifling efforts to achieve pluralism. The government uses prolonged and indefinite pre-trial detention against individuals perceived to be political opponents, activists or human rights defenders.

The last twelve months have seen a proliferation of this characterisation of anti-establishment expression
as amounting to crimes against the state, as well as the license that gives to abandon the rights of the
accused. We might mention:

Mohammed Al Hazza, handed a twenty-three-year prison sentence in Riyadh, charged with
“insulting” the state with cartoons published in Qatar;
Kibet Bull, among the many young protestors disappeared from the streets of Nairobi;
Fahmi Reza, summoned for questioning under the sedition act in Kuala Lumpur and since subjected
to a travel ban;
• and lastly those staffers from LeMan magazine in Istanbul, currently held, as well as one still wanted
by Turkish authorities, accused of “inciting hatred” and under investigation for accepting foreign funds to
act as a fifth column.

It may therefore be asserted that the variety of authoritarianism that entails arbitrary detentions and denial
of due legal process is the ultimate destination of any government that seeks to conflate non-violent
dissent and protest with the enacting and support of terrorism. This is most obviously and keenly felt in
the context of Gaza, a topic that is becoming increasingly hard to comment upon, earnestly or satirically
without risking demonisation, censure, or criminalisation.

Freedom of expression is suffering an assault on a mass scale, all over the world. Ashraf Omar personifies
the struggle. He is an honest man and was engaged in an ordinary and reasonable activity before a brutal
regime chose to recast him as a “terrorist”.

Cartoonists – beacons of free expression around the world – are showing their support for Ashraf Omar,
reminding all of the special power in their work. Cartoons prompt people to think, reflect, criticize… and
laugh. They are by no means a threat, as many wish to present them.

The undersigned organisations declare their commitment that Ashraf Omar will not be
forgotten and take this sad occasion to mark a year of his life wasted, and once again call
for an immediate end to his detention and a swift conclusion to the baseless prosecution
of both Ashraf Omar and Nada Mougheeth.

• Cartooning for Peace
• Cartoonists Rights
• Al Manassa
• Reviewed & Cleared
• Artists at Risk Connection
• Association of Canadian Cartoonists
• Australian Cartoonists Association
• Cartoon Movement
• Cartoonists Co-operative
• Cagle Cartoons
• Committee to Protect Journalists
• Columbia Global Freedom of Expression

• European Cartoon Award
• ForHum
• Freemuse
• Freedom Cartoonists
• Index on Censorship
• Kyiv Club of Cartoonists
• Pakistan Union of Cartoonists
• Reporters without borders
• Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights
• Toons Mag
• United Sketches

For press inquiries, please contact:

Cartooning for Peace – Manon Campbell: manon.campbell@cartooningforpeace.org – +33 (0)7 49 33 55 86

Cartoonists Rights – Terry Anderson: terry.anderson@cartoonistsrights.org

Al Manassa – Nora Younis: nora@almanassa.com

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