Egypt: Cairo rages as football disaster bodies come home

A
total of 74 people, mainly Al-Ahly fans, were stabbed, beaten and crushed to
death
when Al-Masry fans invaded the pitch at the end of the game
and attacked the away supporters with knives and metal bars.

The Al-Ahly Ultras, as the club’s fans are known, had played a prominent role
in anti-Mubarak protests during last year’s Egyptian revolution, famously
helping to beat off a charge by a group of hired men, some on horse- and
camel-back, who attacked protesters in Tahrir Square a year ago.

Some said this was the revenge of the “Mubarak gang”.

Saad Abboud, an MP for the Karama Party, said: “It’s no coincidence that the
common factor between the Battle of the Camels and Port Said is Gamal
Mubarak and his friends.”

Port Said’s governor resigned and the government sacked the town’s police
chief, disbanded the Football Association, and announced an inquiry into the
disaster. More than 40 people were said to have been arrested.

As Egypt’s newly elected MPs held an emergency session of parliament, the
Speaker, Mohammed al-Katatni, said the police had failed in their
responsibility to protect the supporters. “Our revolution is in great
danger,” he warned.

As fresh violence engulfed Cairo’s streets last night, protesters clashed with
security forces and tried to tear down a wall of concrete blocks built
across Mohammed Mahmoud Street near the interior ministry. Security forces
hit back as stones were thrown and at least one soldier was grabbed and
attacked.

At least 20 people were treated by medics for the effect of tear gas.
Motorcycles were used to carry away the injured through the narrow, packed
streets, as ambulances could not get through.

The violence, particularly if repeated in protests planned for today, will put
more pressure on the relationship between the country’s three major
political forces – the army, which holds the reins of power, the Muslim
Brotherhood, whose Freedom and Justice Party dominates parliament, and the
noisy but outnumbered young activists.

FJP spokesmen were eager to put blame on the Mubarak regime remnants rather
than the army directly. The Brotherhood has formed a working alliance with
the army, and its words will deepen the hostility of activists who accuse
them of “hijacking the revolution”.

Survivors of the stadium riot had earlier told The Daily Telegraph that
knife-wielding gangs stormed across the pitch as the final whistle blew.

“There was a group sitting together on the opposite side of the stadium,” said
Mustafa Saleh, 25, adding that they were separate from the ordinary
supporters. He said he had been chased towards the exit by a mob of 20 men
carrying knives, and was hit on the leg by a machete as he sought refuge in
the Al-Ahly team changing room. “We found bodies laid out in a row,” he
said. “The players were crying. Some were saying they would retire, give up,
that they would not be silent about what had happened.”

Other fans gave witness to longstanding rivalries between the two clubs, and
said there had been warnings in the lead-up to the game that Al-Masry Ultras
were planning to attack.

Al-Ahly’s long success as the Manchester United of Egypt makes it a constant
target for abuse. Sherif Galaa, 24, said he did not go because of threats. A
chant had been posted to the Al-Masry club Facebook page two days before
addressed to Al-Ahly fans and promising: “Whoever comes to Port Said, make
sure you write your will first.”

His boyhood friend, Mohammed Abdul Samir, decided to go anyway – and paid with
his life.

There has been a history of trouble at Egyptian football games, but the
violence is more a reflection of the country’s declining security. After
hundreds of protesters were shot dead in the early stages of last year’s
uprising, the interior ministry pulled police back to barracks.

Martial law was declared, but the army had no experience in crowd control.
Since then, even beat policemen have failed to return in strength.

At the game on Wednesday, a small line of police reacted slowly to the pitch
invasion, and was totally overwhelmed.

Abdulrahman, an Al-Ahly fan from Alexandria, said trouble began hours before
kick-off, as supporters were taken in by bus with a police escort.

“We were stoned by the Al-Masry fans as we came into town,” he said. “The
police didn’t stop them.”

Mr Saleh described extraordinary scenes as the game ended and the Al-Ahly fans
tried to leave, finding some exit doors locked. “They ran towards us,” he
said. “We were stuck. We looked up and saw them throwing people from the
upper floors of the stadium.

“They had knives, rubber bullets, even live bullets. Some were firing guns.”

The army sent helicopters to rescue the players and the injured. The Cairo
fans were put on trains back to the capital where they were met by emotional
crowds in the early hours. The dead were ferried in a fleet of ambulances,
most to Cairo’s Zenhom morgue, where relations poured in to formally
identify bodies lining rooms and even the corridors.

As crowds of women in headscarves screamed outside, angry groups of men
awaited their arrival. Mohammed Samir, uncle of a 16-year-old victim,
Mohammed Ashraf Mahdy, said he believed Mubarak supporters were trying to
cause chaos to force the authorities not to hang the former president at the
end of his current trial.

“All the youth of the country are being sacrificed so that Mubarak can live,”
he said. “Libyan people are better than us. They killed their man, end of
story. But we are stuck in this tragedy.”

Al-Masry supporters also protested in Port Said, claiming they were innocent
victims. “We saw the police kill people all over Egypt since the revolution,
so I am not surprised by yesterday,” Bashir, a student, said.

But others ascribed what had happened to no political motives, but only the
lack of security. Ismael, a dock worker, said he saw fans entering the
stadium with knives. “There were no security checks,” he said. “I saw people
pick up other people and throw them over the side of the stands. One group
killed at least 15 people just down from me. They used knives, sticks, their
hands. The ground was covered in blood.”

One “Ultra” was as unabashed as hooligans in other countries. “The Ahly fans
came from Cairo and began to insult the men here,” he said. “They unfurled a
banner criticising us and threw insults at us. “They provoked us, so we
finished them.”

Views: 0

You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

Leave a Reply

Powered by WordPress | Designed by: Premium WordPress Themes | Thanks to Themes Gallery, Bromoney and Wordpress Themes