Amnesty International Dark Web — Official Onion Link & Guide (2026)

Type: Human rights organization — official Tor presence

Access: Tor Browser required

Account required: No — fully free

Clearnet version: amnesty.org

Operated by: Amnesty International — official

Languages: Multiple — English primary

Last verified: March 2026

What Is Amnesty International’s .onion Address?

Amnesty International operates an official .onion hidden service providing censorship-resistant access to its human rights documentation, reporting and campaigns. Amnesty International is one of the world’s most prominent human rights organizations — founded in 1961, it documents political prisoners, torture, extrajudicial killings, freedom of expression violations and other human rights abuses across 150+ countries.

Its .onion address exists primarily for readers in countries where Amnesty International’s clearnet site is blocked — China, Russia, Iran, Belarus and others that routinely block organizations documenting their governments’ human rights records. For activists, journalists and ordinary citizens in these countries, the .onion address provides access to reporting about their own governments’ actions that their governments are actively suppressing.

Onion Address

http://amnestyl337aeioy6lnwzkwzjnjyvy5txgro2cl6rl3bpqpkjqq7w3qd.onion

Clearnet version: https://amnesty.org

Verification: This address is published in Amnesty International’s official documentation. Verify against the clearnet site before use.

How to Access Amnesty International via Tor

  1. Download Tor Browser from torproject.org
  2. Set security level to Safer — Amnesty’s site uses JavaScript for some functionality
  3. Paste the .onion address into the address bar
  4. Browse freely — no account or registration required

What Amnesty International Documents

Focus Area Coverage
Political prisoners Documentation of arbitrary detention worldwide
Torture and ill-treatment Investigations into state-sanctioned abuse
Freedom of expression Journalists, activists, bloggers imprisoned for speech
Armed conflict War crimes, civilian casualties, international humanitarian law
Refugee and migrant rights Detention conditions, deportation, discrimination
Corporate accountability Business and human rights, supply chain abuses
Digital rights Surveillance, internet shutdowns, online censorship

Countries Where Amnesty International Is Blocked

Country Restriction Type .onion Bypasses?
China Full block — Great Firewall ✅ Yes
Russia Blocked since 2022 ✅ Yes
Iran Intermittent blocking ✅ Yes
Belarus Restricted ✅ Yes
North Korea Full internet restriction ⚠️ Depends on Tor access

Why Human Rights Reporting Needs Tor

Amnesty International’s work is directly relevant to the question of why .onion addresses matter for news and information access. The organization specifically documents abuses by governments that also block access to documentation of those abuses. A person living in Russia who wants to read Amnesty’s reporting on Russian military conduct in Ukraine, or a person in China who wants to read about Xinjiang detention camps, cannot access that information through the clearnet because the same government being documented has blocked the documentation.

The .onion address breaks this censorship loop. Traffic routed through Tor cannot be filtered by national infrastructure — the Great Firewall cannot identify that a connection is going to amnesty.org when it exits Tor at a node with a different IP address and no visible destination in the packet headers.

There is also a personal safety dimension. In countries where accessing human rights documentation is surveilled, using Tor to reach Amnesty’s .onion address means the user’s ISP cannot see they are accessing Amnesty’s content. This protection matters for activists, lawyers and journalists who document human rights situations in repressive environments — their browsing history could be used against them if not protected.

Amnesty International’s Digital Security Work

Amnesty International’s Security Lab is directly relevant to Tor users — it researches and documents digital surveillance targeting activists, journalists and civil society. Its most prominent work has included investigations into Pegasus spyware — commercial surveillance software sold to governments and used against journalists, lawyers and human rights defenders globally.

These investigations are available through Amnesty’s .onion address alongside its broader human rights reporting. For security researchers and journalists covering digital rights, Amnesty’s Security Lab publications are a primary source for documented evidence of state-sponsored surveillance.

Reporting Human Rights Abuses to Amnesty

Amnesty International accepts information from witnesses, survivors and insiders about human rights abuses. Contact methods are published on its website. For sources in high-risk environments, consider these security practices when contacting Amnesty:

  • Access Amnesty’s contact information through its .onion address to hide your IP from both Amnesty’s servers and your ISP
  • Use ProtonMail or another encrypted email service via its .onion address for initial contact
  • For sensitive document submission, check whether Amnesty operates a SecureDrop instance — check the SecureDrop directory at its .onion address
  • Strip metadata from all documents before sending — use MAT2 or ExifTool
  • Use Tails OS for the session if your safety situation warrants maximum operational security

Amnesty .onion vs. Other Human Rights Organizations

Organization .onion Address Focus
Amnesty International ✅ Official Broad human rights documentation
Human Rights Watch ❌ None official Investigations and advocacy
EFF ✅ Yes Digital rights specifically
Reporters Without Borders ❌ None official Press freedom

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Amnesty International’s content free to access?

Yes — all of Amnesty International’s public reporting, investigations and campaign materials are freely accessible on both the clearnet and .onion versions without an account or payment. Amnesty is funded by membership fees and donations rather than by content monetization.

Can I donate to Amnesty via the .onion?

The .onion version includes Amnesty’s donation functionality. Donations via the .onion hide your IP from Amnesty’s servers but payment methods — credit card, PayPal — link your identity to the donation through the payment processor. For anonymous donations, check whether Amnesty accepts cryptocurrency — some human rights organizations have begun accepting crypto donations for donors who need financial privacy.

Does Amnesty International know I’m accessing their site via Tor?

Amnesty can see that requests originate from Tor exit nodes but cannot see your real IP address. If you are not logged into an account, you are anonymous to Amnesty beyond your browser fingerprint. Amnesty as an organization is supportive of Tor use — it publishes digital security guides recommending Tor for activists in high-risk environments.

Is Amnesty International’s reporting reliable?

Amnesty International has a documented methodology for its investigations — field research, survivor interviews, satellite imagery analysis and document verification. It has been criticized by some governments whose abuses it documents, and occasionally makes errors that it corrects publicly. Its methodological transparency and correction practices make it more reliable than anonymous sources while its independence from government funding makes it more credible than state-affiliated media for reporting on state conduct.

What should I do if I witness a human rights abuse?

Document what you witnessed with as much specific detail as possible — dates, locations, names of victims and perpetrators where known, photographs or video if safely obtainable. Contact Amnesty International through its secure channels, prioritizing encrypted communication if you are in a high-risk environment. Also consider contacting other human rights organizations — Human Rights Watch, local human rights groups and relevant UN mechanisms — to ensure multiple organizations have the information.