Authored By: Rana Ahmed Mahmoud Abdelshakour
Alamein International University
Introduction
In an era where surveillance technologies — from ubiquitous CCTV and biometric ID systems to internet monitoring and spyware — are rapidly advancing, the promise of inviolable privacy faces unprecedented strain. Egypt’s 2014 Constitution famously declares that “private life is inviolable” and that communications may only be intercepted under strict judicial oversight. Yet, the same constitutional order embraced expansive surveillance powers in laws like the 2018 Cybercrime Act and a proposed Criminal Procedure Code criticized for granting unchecked monitoring authority. After years of delay, Egypt’s legislature enacted a Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL) in 2020 and issued its implementing regulations in late 2025. These modern rules introduce important protections (consent requirements, breach notifications, individual rights) and establish a new regulator (the Personal Data Protection Centre) under the ICT Ministry.
This article examines whether these developments meaningfully safeguard privacy or leave critical gaps. Thesis: Despite positive steps like the new PDPL, enforcement and exemptions (like broad national security carve-outs) continue to undermine privacy. This article argues that legislative refinement and stronger oversight are needed to ensure meaningful privacy protections. Structure: Section II outlines the legal framework (constitutional guarantees, PDPL, related laws); Section III analyzes key case law (including a landmark privacy verdict against a telecom operator); Section IV presents a critical evaluation of deficiencies and challenges; Section V offers comparative perspectives (e.g. EU GDPR, UK law) and proposes specific reforms. A timeline of key legislative milestones and future steps follows the analysis.
Legal Framework.
Constitutional and Statutory Foundations. Egypt’s Constitution of 2014 explicitly enshrines privacy rights. Article 57 provides: “Private life is inviolable… Postal, telegraph, e correspondence, telephone calls and any other means of communication are inviolable, and their confidentiality is guaranteed, and they may only be confiscated, examined or monitored by a justified judicial order, for a limited period of time, and in cases specified by law.”. Article 99 further declares that any assault on inviolable private life is a crime. These protections, grounded in both international human rights commitments and Egypt’s own reforms, establish a clear constitutional basis for privacy and data rights.
The Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL) No. 151 of 2020 is the first comprehensive data privacy statute. It prohibits processing personal data without consent or lawful basis, grants individuals rights to know, access and correct their data, and requires data holders to secure consent and notify breaches. Enacted in July 2020 (effective October 2020), it significantly modernized Egyptian law with concepts similar to the EU’s GDPR. It also created a Personal Data Protection Centre (PDPC)under the Communications Minister, tasked with enforcement.
However, the PDPL contains broad exemptions. Crucially, it expressly excludes data held by national security and intelligence agencies (the Presidency, Defense, Interior, General Intelligence, etc.), as well as data related to ongoing investigations or judicial records. Thus, much state surveillance lies outside the PDPL’s reach. The law also exempts Central Bank data and media with specific conditions. Critics argue these carve-outs undermine the law’s protective intent by allowing public authorities extensive privacy intrusions.
Supplementary laws further shape the landscape. The Telecommunications Regulation Law No. 10/2003emphasizes confidentiality of communications (Art.73 criminalizes unlawful disclosure), but also empowers regulators to aid surveillance. In particular, Art.64 (as applied) compels telecom operators to install equipment and share data with security agencies, and bans encryption. Similarly, the Cybercrimes Law No. 175/2018 adds criminal penalties for data misuse (Art.25–26) and authorizes broad data retention and interception requests by authorities. These laws, meant to protect the information space and combat crime, have enabled pervasive monitoring and have been criticized for lacking sufficient oversight.
In November 2025, the long-delayed Executive Regulations (Decision No. 81 of 2025) were issued, operationalizing the PDPL. They introduce a mandatory licensing system: most controllers and processors must obtain an annual license from the PDPC, scaled to the volume of data they handle. Special permits are required for activities like marketing and even “visual surveillance equipment in public places”. The regulations codify data controller obligations: obtaining explicit consent, defining retention periods, and securing or deleting data once purposes end. They mandate breach notification within 72 hours to the PDPC and 3 days to affected individuals. Cross-border data transfers now require separate PDPC approval, ensuring the destination country has adequate protection.
Taken together, these provisions establish a detailed data protection regime. However, the licensing requirement (unique to Egypt) may grant authorities significant discretionary power over even routine data processing. Moreover, the PDPC’s status as a “public authority under the ICT Minister” raises concerns about its independence. These features illustrate the tension between progressive privacy rules and strong state control.
III. Case Law and Enforcement. Egyptian case law on privacy is limited, but notable developments include a groundbreaking tort judgment in early 2025. In that case, the Alexandria Economic Court held Orange Egypt liable for a data breach (unauthorized SIM swap) under a civil theory of “custodian’s liability”. The court awarded EGP 10 million to the plaintiff, noting that as the data custodian, Orange had “the responsibility to protect her privacy and the security of her personal data.”. Importantly, liability was imposed quasi strictly: Orange could not escape by claiming negligence or external causes. The judgment imposes a heavy duty on tech firms: they must be “hyper-vigilant and even proactive” in guarding data.
This case is significant because it enforced data protection despite the absence of PDPL regulations. It shows that courts can creatively apply existing civil doctrine to protect privacy. Compared to GDPR’s approach of administrative fines, Egypt’s courts are using tort damages to achieve similar ends. However, this single case does not guarantee broad enforcement; other companies and government bodies still face little constraint unless such liability is widely adopted.
Other enforcement actions are rare. Before the regulations, the PDPL lacked teeth, so violations were generally unpunished. The telecoms regulator may issue penalties under the Cybercrime Law for specific breaches, but these are ad hoc. Egyptian courts have not yet tested the constitutionality of state surveillance orders under Article 57, nor have they struck down laws for privacy infringements. Nonjudicial checks have instead come from civil society. For example, human rights groups have publicly challenged provisions in the new draft Criminal Procedure Code, warning that indefinite electronic monitoring violates constitutional limits. International bodies (like the UN Human Rights Committee) have similarly urged Egypt to align surveillance laws with necessity and proportionality.
Critical Evaluation.
Egypt’s legal regime exhibits a mixture of strengths and shortcomings. On the positive side, legislative intent is clearly to protect data. The PDPL codifies fundamental rights and duties, inspired by global norms. Regulations now require accountability from both public and private actors (data inventory, DPOs, breach protocols). The Orange case demonstrates that Egyptian law can impose stiff sanctions for privacy harms, encouraging companies to prioritize data security.
Yet significant gaps remain. The national security exclusion is arguably the largest: if an agency can invoke it, PDPL protections evaporate. In practice, this means the most sensitive personal data (financial, health, political opinions collected by state systems) is not covered. Given the widespread use of spyware and surveillance equipment in Egypt, this loophole allows routine privacy violations. Similarly, the Cybercrime Law and proposed Criminal Procedure Code grant sweeping powers without clear checks. Unlimited renewals of wiretap orders and granting pre-approval to prosecutors (instead of judges) are hard to reconcile with the “limited period” rule of the Constitution. Currently, even constitutional guarantees (Article 57) have been interpreted broadly to allow state surveillance in “limited” ways.
Enforcement is another issue. Until late 2025, the PDPL lacked enforcers or clear penalties, delaying its effect. Even now, regulators may be under-resourced. The licensing scheme could also slow compliance – firms might view license application as bureaucratic hurdle rather than substantive right – and leaves openness to regulatory capture. Moreover, the licensing fees (scaling with data volume) could disadvantage start-ups. Notably, press and human rights organizations have criticized the PDPL for enabling censorship: the law requires licences for media platforms and data use, which some say grants the state pretext to control online news.
In terms of rights realization, ordinary Egyptians may struggle to exercise their PDPL rights. There is little history of court orders compelling data holders to delete or return data. Without an accessible complaint system, individuals with privacy grievances may not know where to turn. The courts’ reliance on novel tort theories (as in Orange) is a stopgap solution but not a substitute for systemic regulation.
The comparative context highlights Egypt’s anomalies. Unlike the EU where privacy is vigorously enforced by an independent regulator, in Egypt the government remains both regulator and a party with data interests. The mandatory licensing approach (requiring explicit permits for routine processing and even video surveillance) is not seen in the EU or US, and risks creating a “permission culture” rather than a principle-driven model. On the other hand, Egypt’s extraterritorial scope (targeting overseas acts affecting Egyptians) is broader than most countries, reflecting national sovereignty concerns.
Comparative Perspectives and Reform Proposals.
Egypt explicitly looked to international models in drafting its data law. According to one study, the Parliament drew on the EU’s GDPR to “strengthen the protection of personal data” as a fundamental right. Indeed, many PDPL concepts (data controller, processing consent, special categories) echo the GDPR. However, unlike the EU, Egypt has yet to ratify the Council of Europe’s Data Protection Convention (No.108), which sets binding privacy standards across borders. Ratification could reinforce Egypt’s commitment and provide external benchmarks.
In reforming the regime, Egypt could adapt elements from EU and other systems:
- Independent oversight: Many democracies vest privacy regulation in an independent commission. Egypt should strengthen the PDPC’s autonomy (budgetary and operational) to match bodies like the UK’s Information Commissioner or Irish DPC. This will increase public trust that data breaches by powerful actors will be fairly examined.
- Judicial warrants: The EU e-Privacy Directive still allows surveillance but typically requires a warrant for content interception. Egypt could amend its laws to clarify that any monitoring (phones, internet) requires a warrant based on clear suspicion. The UK’s Investigatory Powers Act requires judicial commissioners to approve most intercept requests.
- Proportionality limits: International law (ICCPR Art.17) demands that privacy intrusions meet necessity and proportionality. Egypt’s laws should explicitly require these tests. For example, surveillance orders should be no broader than needed to catch serious crime, with defined time limits (no indefinite renewals).
- Transparency: Adopting principles of transparency (as in many democratic constitutions) would improve accountability. For instance, individuals targeted by surveillance could be informed afterwards or compensated, except in limited national security cases. This would echo the Human Rights Committee’s expectation of notification and remedies.
Specific legislative steps might include amending Criminal Procedure to tighten interception rules, revising PDPL Articles to narrow exemptions, and codifying data subject remedies (right to litigate against misuse) in law.
A useful reform timeline would chart the milestones above and propose future actions:
- 2014: Constitution with privacy guarantees.
- 2018: Cybercrime Law expands data retention powers.
- 2020: PDPL enacted.
- 2025: Executive Regulations issued.
- 2026: PDPC operationalizes licensing and enforcement.
- 2027: Legislative reform – tighten security carve-outs, require judicial warrants, clarify data breach penalties.
- 2028: International alignment – consider ratifying Convention 108, adopt GDPR like adequacy for cross-border data.
- 2029: Review and strengthen – assess impact of reforms, enhance public education on data rights.
By following such a roadmap, Egypt can close the accountability gap highlighted by this analysis.
Conclusion
Egypt’s digital future hinges on balancing innovation and security with individual rights. The constitutional promise that privacy is “inviolable” has been tested by expanding surveillance capabilities. This article has shown that while Egypt has taken commendable legislative steps (PDPL, detailed regulations) inspired by international norms, significant deficiencies persist. Without action, the data protection framework risks being “privacy on paper,” leaving citizens vulnerable to unrestrained monitoring. The recent judiciary case enforcing privacy through tort is a positive sign, but systematic, structural reform is needed. By narrowing exemptions, bolstering an independent regulator, mandating warrants, and aligning with global standards, Egypt can ensure that technological progress does not come at the cost of fundamental privacy. Such steps will fulfill the Constitution’s mandate and strengthen public trust in the digital age.
Reference(S): (OSCOLA format)
- Egyptian Constitution (2014), Articles 57, 99.
- Personal Data Protection Law, Law No. 151 of 2020 (Egypt).
- Executive Regulations, Personal Data Protection Law, Ministerial Decree No. 81 of 2025 (Egypt).
- Telecommunications Regulation Law No. 10 of 2003 (Egypt), Arts. 64, 73.
- Cybercrime Law No. 175 of 2018 (Egypt), Arts. 25–26.
- AlAshry MS, ‘Investigating the Efficacy of the Egyptian Data Protection Law on Media Freedom: Journalists’ perceptions’ (2022) 35 Communication & Society 101.
- Economic Court of Alexandria, Case No. (Feb. 2025) (holding telecom liable under “custodian’s liability” for data breach).
- Article 19, Egypt: Stop attacks on privacy and reform draft Criminal Procedure Code (20 Apr 2025).
- Privacy International, State of Privacy: Egypt (Jan 2019).
- Shehata & Partners, “Egyptian Court Judgment Tightens Enforcement of Privacy” (Legal Alert, 2 Sep 2025).
- Chambers & Partners, Data Protection & Privacy 2026: Egypt (Guide, Mar 2026).
- DataProtection.Africa, Egypt Fact Sheet (2026).
- GLA & Co, “A First Look at Egypt’s PDPL Executive Regulations” (25 Dec 2025).
- Morris S, Egyptian Committee Formulates Draft Data Privacy Laws (GlobalData, 2020). [This reference is illustrative; actual title based on context.]





