Updated: On Thursday, 23 April
2026, a Kuwaiti court acquitted US-Kuwaiti journalist Ahmed
Shihab-Eldin on all charges following nearly two months of
detention. He has not yet been released, though.
The news came officially from the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).
Ahmed Shihab-Eldin, an award-winning Kuwaiti-American journalist of Palestinian origins who posts prolifically on social media, especially on Twitter, where he is known as @ASE, was arrested in Kuwait on March 3, 2026.
"It is understood that authorities have charged him with spreading false information, harming national security, and misusing his mobile phone – vague and overly broad accusations that are routinely used to silence independent journalists," the CPJ statement said, calling on the Kuwaiti government to release him.
In the days before his detention, Shihab-Eldin — who was visiting his family in Kuwait — shared publicly available videos and images related to the US-Israel war on Iran and the Iranian retaliation on Gulf states, just as any respectable professional journalist would do in his place.
![]() |
| Ahmed Shihab El-Din in Doha Film Festival |
On March 2, he shared photos and videos of a US fighter jet that crashed in Kuwait on Substack.
That video had been geolocated and verified by CNN. None of his posts were photos or videos he took himself.
What makes this case particularly absurd from a legal standpoint is the timing.
Kuwait enacted Law No. 13 of 2026, aimed at safeguarding and protecting the supreme interests of military authorities, on March 15— nearly two weeks after his arrest on March 3.
He was therefore arrested and charged under a law that did not yet exist at the time of his alleged offense.
The law carries prison terms of up to 10 years for spreading false rumours related to military entities with the intent of undermining confidence in them.
CPJ launched a campaign for his release under the hashtag #FreeAhmed with an online petition.
Several international organizations including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch demanded his release.
The story was covered by several Western news outlets. Several US senators and members of Congress raised his case as an American citizen — but as of today, nothing has moved on the Kuwaiti side.
Updated: Most critically — as of yesterday, April 22: his international legal counsel issued an urgent statement saying they were "extremely concerned for Ahmed's safety and wellbeing" in Kuwaiti detention.





