
An Egyptian Christian convert stares down the death penalty not for planting bombs, but for daring to leave Islam and speak his faith online.
Story Snapshot
- Said Mansour Rezk Abdelrazek faces execution on terrorism charges tied solely to his 2016 conversion and criticism of Islam.
- Egypt labels religious speech as joining banned groups and inciting unrest, despite no violence.
- USCIRF names him a religious prisoner of conscience amid torture claims like forced tattoo removal.
- Trial opened April 21, 2026; next hearing June 15, 2026, in Cairo’s terrorism court.
- Exposes Egypt’s constitutional hypocrisy on absolute freedom of belief.
Abdelrazek’s Path to Persecution
Said Mansour Rezk Abdelrazek converted to Christianity in 2016 after personal reflection. Russian authorities arrested him in 2023 for online posts offensive to Islam during his asylum bid. Egyptian officials detained him without warrant on July 15, 2025, after he posted beliefs online and sought to update his ID religion. Supreme State Security Prosecution charged him July 22 with contempt for Islam, joining a banned terrorist group, inciting unrest, and spreading false news. Trial began April 21, 2026, at First Criminal Terrorism Circuit in Badr, Cairo.
Terrorism Charges for Words Alone
Prosecutors accuse Abdelrazek of establishing and leading an unlawful group, financing it, joining a banned organization, and promoting ideas harmful to national unity. He faces contempt for Islam by challenging its principles. No violence alleged; charges stem from speech and conversion. Egypt’s courts impose death for non-killing offenses like these, defying international law. This mirrors thousands referred for terrorism over peaceful rights exercise.
Brutal Detention and Torture Reports
Authorities hold Abdelrazek in 10th of Ramadan Prison near Cairo, denying food, clothes, and medical care. Guards and inmates abused him for converting. They forced removal of his Christian tattoo and suspended him hours in crucifixion position. Since 2016, he suffered arrests, torture, forced divorce, son separation, and surveillance. Cairo Institute documents this as persistent persecution of Islam converts.
Egypt’s Religious Freedom Paradox
Article 64 promises absolute belief freedom, yet converts cannot change ID religion, risking security prosecution. Apostasy lacks formal ban but triggers terror labels. Egypt ranks 42nd on Open Doors’ 2026 list of hardest places for Christians. State targets critics, stifling protests and civil society. Pew polls show 84% Egyptians back death for leaving Islam, pressuring courts despite global outcry.
Egyptian Christian Could Face Death Penalty on Terrorism Charges for Criticizing Islam https://t.co/1RXjqhj1Sw #gatewaypundit via @gatewaypundit
— Debra Dosch (@DebraDosch) April 24, 2026
International Outcry and Stakeholder Roles
USCIRF labels Abdelrazek conscience prisoner, detained for faith, not threats. Amnesty decries unfair trials and death sentences. Cairo Institute urged Australian intervention January 26, 2026. Coptic Solidarity tracks charges. U.S. State corroborates torture. Outcome sets precedent: conviction chills converts, strains U.S.-Egypt ties, reinforces conversion impossibility. Common sense aligns with conservatives valuing faith freedom—Egypt’s laws mock it.
Sources:
Trial Opens in Egypt for Christian Charged with ‘Challenging Islam’
Amnesty International Report on Egypt
2023 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Egypt








