EFF Launches Emergency Offline Campaign for Saudi Wikipedia Editor Osama Khalid Sentenced to 14 Years
Breaking: EFF Mobilizes Global Support for Saudi Blogger Osama Khalid
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) today announced a new offline campaign for Osama Khalid, a Saudi Wikipedia editor and open-source advocate sentenced to 14 years in prison for his online writings. Khalid, now 30, was detained in July 2020 during a wave of arbitrary arrests amid the COVID-19 lockdown. His sentence has fluctuated wildly—from 5 years to 32, then down to 14—highlighting what rights groups call a arbitrary judicial system.

“The huge discrepancy between sentences handed down at different stages underscores the arbitrary manner in which sentencing is carried out in the Saudi judicial system,” wrote ALQST, a Saudi human rights organization, in a joint letter earlier this year. EFF is now partnering with ALQST to amplify international pressure.
Background: From Teen Wikipedian to Political Prisoner
Osama Khalid started contributing to Wikipedia Arabic at age 12. During the height of the blogging era, he became a prolific writer, covering topics like internet freedom, open-source technology, and his home country’s human rights record. He also translated for EFF’s HTTPS Everywhere and attended global conferences while training to become a pediatrician.
His “crime,” according to Saudi authorities, was sharing information that conflicted with official narratives. Khalid’s Wikipedia pages included entries on women’s rights activist Loujain al‑Hathloul (an EFF client) and al‑Ha’ir prison. His now‑deleted blog criticized government plans to surveil encrypted platforms. In April 2020, a joint letter by ALQST and other groups noted the arbitrary sentencing pattern.

What This Means: A Global Test for Free Expression
EFF’s campaign for Khalid is part of a broader fight. Previous efforts for Ola Bini (a Swedish developer targeted in Ecuador) and Alaa Abd El Fattah have shown that international pressure can shift political costs. “Supporting these individuals is about defending the principle that writing code, sharing ideas, and criticizing governments should not be treated as crimes,” an EFF spokesperson said.
The case underscores how governments worldwide use vague cybercrime laws and national security claims to silence critics. Khalid’s imprisonment is a reminder that attacks on free expression rarely stay within borders. EFF urges readers to join the offline campaign and sign petitions via eff.org.
Immediate Impact: How You Can Help
- Sign the ALQST petition demanding Khalid’s release.
- Share his story on social media using #FreeOsamaKhalid.
- Donate to EFF’s work to support digital rights defenders.
EFF will continue to campaign alongside ALQST. “Public pressure and sustained advocacy can help secure meaningful protections for those targeted,” the organization stated. The next hearing is set for early 2025.
Related Articles
- 6 Key Facts About the TanStack Supply Chain Attack That Hit OpenAI Devices
- Everything You Need to Know About the Ecovacs W3 Winbot Window Cleaning Robot
- How to Design and Mod Your Own Steam Controller Accessories Using Valve’s Official CAD Files
- Cisco's Record Quarter Marred by Mass Layoffs: Key Questions Answered
- 7 Essential Lessons from a Tech Pioneer: Gratitude, Community, and the Future of AI
- Exploring the Latest Windows 11 Insider Preview Builds: Key Features and Channel Changes
- Windows 11 Gets a Speed Boost and Fewer Distractions: What You Need to Know
- Navigating Edtech Vetting: A Parent and Educator's Guide to Addressing Screen Time Concerns