A scholar from
Cambridge University estimated in 2011 that during
Mubarak’s reign, the police informally employed 1.5 million Baltagy and informers.
Amnesty International and other
watchdogs bemoaned Baltagiya interference both in the 2005
parliamentary and
presidential elections as well as in the 2010
parliamentary elections. Baltagiya gained international media attention when fighting on the
Tahrir Square during the
2011 Egyptian Revolution. In the
Port Said Stadium disaster on 1 February 2012, eyewitnesses accused the police of allowing Baltagiya in plain clothes into the stadium with weapons and then not intervening to stop the violence. Egyptian politician
Ahmed Tantawi claimed that his supporters were attacked by pro-government thugs during his campaign in the
2023 Egyptian presidential election. On 13 June 2025 a group of Baltagiya in
Ismailia attacked international activists supporting the
Soumoud Convoy trying to reach
Rafah border crossing in an attempt to break the
Blockade of the Gaza Strip. Non-official attempts at
internet censorship in Arab countries have been named "cyber Baltagiya", as some former street tactics translate into digital strife. Unlike
troll farms, which try to manipulate discourse on a given platform, these web Baltagy aim either at the technical breakdown or sudden legal incrimination of oppositional online activities. ==Notable Baltagiya==