Khthon documents mass graves, atrocity crimes, and forensic evidence from conflict zones worldwide. Our work is strictly humanitarian and apolitical.
This site may contain imagery and descriptions of deceased individuals, violent injuries, and human remains gathered in the course of active investigations. Content is presented for accountability and documentation purposes only.
Khthon documents mass graves, atrocity crimes, and forensic evidence from conflict zones worldwide. Our work is strictly humanitarian and apolitical.
This site may contain imagery and descriptions of deceased individuals, violent injuries, and human remains gathered in the course of active investigations.
Country / Region Overview
Egypt's landscape of mass graves must be understood against the backdrop of state power, religion, and insurgency. Since 2013, the Egyptian Armed Forces have waged a harsh counterinsurgency against ISIS-affiliated militants in North Sinai.
The insurgents frame their violence in explicitly religious terms, targeting Coptic Christians, mosques, and rival Islamist groups. The state positions itself as defender of national unity and Islamic tradition, even as its tactics include enforced disappearances, torture, and extrajudicial executions. In this conflict, religion is both a justification for violence and a veil over abuses, leaving communities caught between militant extremism and authoritarian repression.
"Egypt's graves sit at the intersection of political power, religious discourse, and the ongoing erasure of human beings from both land and memory."
— Khthon Field Assessment
Clandestine burials are part of this hidden war. Testimonies collected by the Sinai Foundation for Human Rights, combined with open-source imagery and forensic architectural analysis, point to large burial sites near al-Arish linked to military operations. Victims, often disappeared from checkpoints or taken from raids, were never returned to their families and are believed to have been buried secretly — a pattern that mirrors the enforced disappearance infrastructure of the broader Egyptian security state.
For Khthon, this case highlights how mass graves are produced not only by insurgents but also by the very state that claims religious and national legitimacy. Investigation demands careful integration of SOCMINT and HUMINT with GEOINT: satellite imagery to locate disturbed soil and vehicle access routes, witness accounts to verify patterns, and historical overlays to distinguish legitimate cemeteries from clandestine pits.
1954–1981
Nasser, Sadat, and the foundations of state repression
Under Nasser and Sadat, Egypt develops a deep state security apparatus with documented use of torture, political detention, and disappearances targeting leftists, Islamists, and dissidents. Detention facilities including Tora Prison and Scorpion Prison become sites of systematic abuse. Many political prisoners simply vanish from official records. This period establishes the institutional infrastructure that will later be deployed in Sinai and against the Muslim Brotherhood.
1992–2012
Mubarak-era counterterrorism and Sinai insurgency roots
Under Mubarak, Egypt's security forces conduct a brutal suppression of Islamist insurgents in Upper Egypt during the 1990s. In Sinai, the 2004–2005 tourist bombings trigger a crackdown that displaces and imprisons thousands of Bedouin from North Sinai. This mass arbitrary detention — poorly documented and largely invisible to outside observers — feeds grievances that later draw local populations toward ISIS-affiliate Wilayat Sinai.
August 2013
Rabaa massacre — state mass killing in Cairo
On August 14, 2013, Egyptian security forces disperse pro-Morsi sit-ins at Rabaa al-Adawiya and al-Nahda squares. Human Rights Watch documents at least 817 killed in a single day — one of the largest mass killings of demonstrators in recent history. Bodies are removed rapidly and families are denied access to them for days. The state narrative of security justification is backed by religious authority figures, illustrating how religion is weaponised to legitimise atrocity.
2014–Present
North Sinai counterinsurgency — disappearances and clandestine burials
Following Wilayat Sinai's escalating attacks, the Egyptian military declares North Sinai a closed military zone and launches a sustained campaign that includes mass demolitions of villages, forced displacement of the Bedouin population, and systematic checkpoint disappearances. Thousands of men are taken from their homes, from cars, or from buses and never returned. Testimonies compiled by the Sinai Foundation for Human Rights describe buried bodies near military compounds outside al-Arish.
2017
Al-Rawda mosque massacre — Wilayat Sinai atrocity
On November 24, 2017, Wilayat Sinai gunmen attack a Sufi mosque during Friday prayers in Bir al-Abd, killing 311 civilians and wounding over 100 — the deadliest terrorist attack in Egypt's modern history. The attack targets Sufi worshippers, reflecting the militants' sectarian violence within Islam itself. Egypt responds with intensified airstrikes and ground operations, with civilian casualties and further disappearances documented in the aftermath.
2019
Forensic Architecture — al-Arish burial site analysis
Forensic Architecture and the Sinai Foundation for Human Rights publish an investigation into suspected mass burial sites near al-Arish, using satellite imagery, witness testimony, and architectural analysis to identify disturbed ground near military positions. The investigation documents vehicle access routes, soil disturbance patterns, and the proximity of sites to known military detention facilities — a methodology directly applicable to Khthon's GEOINT framework.
2021–Present
Operation Sinai 2018 — ongoing military operations
The Egyptian military announces Operation Sinai 2018 in February 2018, with operations continuing under various names through to the present. UN and NGO reports document extrajudicial executions — including cases where Egyptian military social media accounts post videos of killings — alongside ongoing demolitions and displacement. The North Sinai civilian population has been reduced from over 400,000 to a fraction of that number, constituting one of the region's most under-reported forced displacement crises.
Ongoing
Khthon monitoring — SOCMINT, HUMINT, and forensic overlay
Khthon monitors Egypt through satellite time-series of North Sinai showing soil disturbance near military compounds, cross-referenced with testimony from displaced Bedouin communities and NGO documentation. The forensic architecture methodology pioneered by Forensic Architecture at al-Arish is adapted into Khthon's own site assessment protocol. Egypt presents the additional challenge of double concealment: the state simultaneously creates graves and suppresses the institutional mechanisms — media, NGOs, courts — that could document them.
Browse Khthon's full catalogue of country and case reports across seven global regions, or get involved with our ongoing investigations.