EFF Mobilizes Global Support for Saudi Wikipedia Editor Facing 14-Year Sentence
Breaking: Osama Khalid, Saudi Wikipedia Contributor, Remains Detained Despite Sentence Reduction
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has launched an urgent offline campaign to demand the release of Osama Khalid, a Saudi Wikipedia editor and open-source advocate who has been arbitrarily detained since July 2020. Initially sentenced to five years, the 32-year-old doctor and human rights defender saw his term escalated to 32 years on appeal, then reduced to 25 in 2023, and most recently cut to 14 years in September 2024—a pattern that rights groups call a mockery of due process.

Khalid, who began editing Wikipedia Arabic at age 12, is imprisoned for sharing information online that contradicted official narratives, including editing pages on women’s rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul and the notorious al-Ha’ir prison. His blog, now taken offline, criticized government plans to surveil encrypted platforms. The EFF warns that his prosecution is part of a broader crackdown on digital expression in Saudi Arabia.
Background: From Teenage Editor to Prisoner of Conscience
Osama Khalid grew up in the height of the blogging era, writing extensively about open-source technology, freedom of expression, and internet censorship in Saudi Arabia. He contributed translations to the EFF's HTTPS Everywhere project and attended international tech conferences while training to become a pediatrician.
His arrest came during a wave of arbitrary detentions under Saudi Arabia's Covid-19 lockdown. Authorities accused him of violating vague cybercrime laws, a charge that rights experts say was used to silence a peaceful critic. According to ALQST, a Saudi human rights organization leading the campaign for his release, “The huge discrepancy between sentences handed down at different stages in the case underscores the arbitrary manner in which sentencing is carried out in the Saudi judicial system.”
EFF’s New Offline Campaign and Global Solidarity
The EFF’s “Offline” campaign spotlights Khalid alongside previous cases like Ola Bini, the Swedish developer targeted in Ecuador, and Alaa Abd El Fattah, the Egyptian activist. “Supporting these individuals has never been about defending only persons; it’s about defending the principle that writing code, sharing ideas, and criticizing governments should not be crimes,” an EFF spokesperson told Breaking News.

The campaign urges international pressure on Saudi authorities, using letters, social media drives, and partnerships with ALQST. The EFF emphasizes that public solidarity can shift the political cost of repression, citing successful outcomes in previous cases. “Osama Khalid, like so many human rights defenders, must not be forgotten,” the group added.
What This Means: A Global Test for Free Expression
Khalid’s case exemplifies how governments use national security claims to silence technologists, journalists, and activists. The arbitrary sentences handed down to him reflect a broader trend: Saudi Arabia has repeatedly used cybercrime charges against peaceful online expression, targeting critics of its human rights record.
The EFF warns that attacks on free expression are rarely confined to borders. From Ecuador to Egypt, similar patterns of politically motivated prosecutions are emerging. “If we don’t stand together, no online critic is safe,” the EFF said. The organization calls on the global tech community to raise its voice, noting that sustained campaigning can help secure meaningful protections for those like Osama Khalid.
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