Elbuzidi and Alharati v FCDO: the high court tightens the screws on government disclosure in torture rendition claims
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The High Court has ordered a phased disclosure regime that could expose thousands of classified documents.
Allegations that MI5 and MI6 fed intelligence to Libyan and Egyptian security services, setting in motion a chain of unlawful detention and torture, are not new to the English courts. What Elbuzidi and Alharati v The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office and Others [2026] EWHC 1496 (KB) adds to that canon is a carefully constructed framework for forcing the government to confront what it actually knows, and on what timeline it will have to show its hand.
The two claimants allege they were detained and tortured by the Egyptian security services in Cairo during a twelve-day period in August and September 2007. Their case rests, in part, on documents recovered from Tripoli following the fall of the Qaddafi regime, the so-called "Tripoli cache", which they say demonstrates sustained intelligence-sharing between British, Libyan, and Egyptian services from at least early 2006. The government neither confirms nor denies the documents' authenticity, which is precisely the problem.
Mr Justice Jay, sitting in the King's Bench Division, delivered his open judgement on 18 June 2026 following a case management conference in April. The headline ruling is a phased approach to disclosure that stops short of immediately requiring the Defendants to trawl through the approximately 40,000 documents currently held by the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament, but leaves that door conspicuously open.
The significance lies in what the court said about asymmetry. Citing Alame v Shell PLC [2024] EWCA Civ 1500, Jay J accepted that where one party holds a considerable quantity of information the other simply cannot access, the overriding objective demands that the court actively work to level the playing field. In a case involving a closed material procedure, the structural disadvantage to claimants is even more pronounced: not only does the government hold the documents, but a large proportion will never be seen by the claimants or their lawyers, only by Special Advocates operating under severe constraints.
That observation matters beyond this case. It reflects a broader judicial acknowledgement that the CMP regime, however procedurally necessary, creates a forensic imbalance that the court must consciously counterweight. Jay J drew on his own earlier decision in Kamoka v The Security Service [2019] EWHC 2283 (QB) to confirm that the present case is properly characterised as raising systemic failure and similar fact evidence, bringing a wide range of documentation into potential relevance.
The phased approach is, in practice, a pressure mechanism. The government is directed first to review the reports of the Gibson Inquiry and the ISC, together with the product of four internal UKIC detainee reviews, for any material relating to the claimants' names or to three defined categories of risk: the likelihood that intelligence passed to the Libyan services would reach the Egyptians; the risk of Egyptian detention arising from that intelligence; and the risk of torture upon detention. If that first stage does not satisfy the court that justice can be done, a further closed CMC will examine whether the underlying documents behind those reports must follow. The ultimate step, disclosure of the 40,000 ISC documents themselves, remains squarely in play.
Jay J also made a practical order that deserves attention: the Defendants must ascertain from the ISC where those documents are, confirm that they will be returned on request, and identify whether searchable indexes exist. That is not a theoretical exercise; it signals that the court is already thinking about the mechanics of stage three.
On the date range for disclosure, the court settled on 1 January 2006 to 31 January 2008, the latter being chosen to capture post-detention communications that might, if the intelligence-sharing hypothesis is correct, have continued briefly after the claimants were released. The government had pushed for a narrower window. The court was unpersuaded.
What the judgement ultimately illustrates is that in litigation of this kind, the government's procedural comfort zone shrinks with each CMC. The phased model is neither a concession to the claimants nor a complete vindication of the defendants; it is a judicial holding position, explicit about where it is heading if the first phase falls short. For those tracking the long arc of post-9/11 rendition and detention litigation in England and Wales, the direction of travel is becoming harder to misread.












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