Rahmaniyah court ruled on Thursday 12.24.2015 in Case No. 1656 of 2014 accused the student, “Abdul Rahman Nazmi Dewidar”  fourth year Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Damanhur, and the student, “Abdul Rahman Walid Abdel Moneim” 3 years of prison and on the back accused of demonstrating without a permit and inciting riots and joining a banned group .

The Rahmaniyah Court has decided on Sunday 12/20/2015 to postpone the sentencing hearing in case No. 1656 of 2014 crimes and accused the students of the session Thursday 24/12/2015 to issue its decision before to imprison them a years.

Wednesday 08/10/2014 arrested him  from a street before inserted their names in case No. 1656 of 2014 crimes have been jailed him  without trial before the court decides that the hearing to determine the right pronunciation and then postponed to Thursday 24 of December.

The student arbitrary arrest and force disappearance both are flagrant violation of the laws and international conventions to which Egypt has signed and ratified, particularly as stated in Article 55 of the Egyptian Constitution and the current, which states that: “Every person who is either arrested, detained, or his freedom is restricted shall be treated in a manner that maintains his dignity. He/she may not be tortured, intimidated, coerced, or physically or morally harmed; and may not be seized or detained except in places designated for that purpose, which shall be adequate on human and health levels. The State shall cater for the needs of people with disability. Violating any of the aforementioned is a crime punished by Law. An accused has the right to remain silent. Every statement proved to be made by a detainee under any of the foregoing actions, or threat thereof, shall be disregarded and not be relied upon”

As well as article 54 which states: ” Personal freedom is a natural right, shall be protected and may not be infringed upon. Except for the case of being caught in flagrante delicto, it is not permissible to arrest, search, detain, or restrict the freedom of anyone in any way except by virtue of a reasoned judicial order that was required in the context of an investigation, every person whose freedom is restricted shall be immediately notified of the reasons therefore; shall be informed of his/her rights in writing; shall be immediately enabled to contact his/her relatives and lawyer; and shall be brought before the investigation authority within twenty four (24) hours as of the time of restricting his/her freedom.’