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Deadly Egyptian riots go beyond football

February 2, 2012, Category: News · Leave a Comment

Deadly Egyptian riots go beyond football

By James Montague, for CNN
updated 10:46 PM EST, Wed February 1, 2012
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Fans storm on to the pitch during riots that erupted after the football match between Al-Masry and Al-Ahly.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Egypt’s health ministry says 74 people were killed in Wednesday’s clashes
  • Matches between Cairo’s top clubs, Al Ahly and Zamalek, have history of violence
  • Anti-authoritarian fan groups of “Ultras” accused Mubarak regime of heavy handed treatment
  • When revolution began, groups joined forces and led many of the Cairo protests

Editor’s note:

(CNN) — The deaths of 73 football fans shortly after a match between Cairo ‘s Al Ahly and Al Masry in Port Said, Egypt, has shocked the world.

More than 1,000 more have been injured in scenes that will leave an indelible mark on post-revolution Egypt — because in Egypt soccer matters perhaps more than anywhere.

Passions have always run high in Egyptian football. The Cairo derby between Al Ahly and their rivals Zamalek is the biggest football match in Africa, and has to be held at a neutral venue, usually with a neutral foreign referee, to combat a history of enmity and violence.

74 dead, hundreds injured in riots

In 2009, a World Cup qualifier between Egypt and Algeria sparked riots in Cairo, Algiers and beyond. But domestic football has also been on the frontline during the revolution that toppled former president Hosni Mubarak last year.

For the past five years, highly organized and anti-authoritarian fan groups of “Ultras,” especially from Al Ahly and Zamalek, have been in conflict with the police at football grounds, objecting to the heavy handed treatment meted out to them by Mubarak’s forces. In a country that had little public space, there were two forums for dissent: the mosque and the football stadium.

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10512  120201092340 ctw intv james montague egypt soccer riots 00001004 story body Deadly Egyptian riots go beyond footballSoccer in the Middle East and security

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10512  120201074358 egypt soccer riot flares story body Deadly Egyptian riots go beyond footballChaos unfolds after deadly soccer match

“The whole concept of any independent organization didn’t exist, not unions, not political parties,” explained the leader of the Al Ahly ultras last April.

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10512  120202124834 egypt flames clashes soccer story body Deadly Egyptian riots go beyond footballWorst case of soccer violence in Egypt

How football fans toppled Mubarak

“Then we started to organize football ultras … to them it was the youth, in big numbers — very smart people — who could mobilize themselves quickly. They feared us.”

When the revolution began, the groups joined forces and led many of the protests in Cairo’s Tahrir Square. Some even credit the ultras with a major role in several of the key battles. But that hasn’t endeared them to the authorities post revolution.

CNN Arabic

Since February, violence has continued to blight the game. The Egyptian Football Association even considered canceling last season’s league.

Much of that was blamed on the security vacuum left when Mubarak’s hated police force melted back in to the population. Although other people — and many within Egypt’s ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces [SCAF] — view the ultras as the problem.

In that context, the deaths of 73 fans — most if not all hailing from Al Ahly — at a football match will leave many within Egypt questioning how and why this has happened as the police watched on.

For now SCAF has ordered the cancellation of the league as they deal with the worst civil disturbance to hit Egypt since the revolution. Al Ahly’s fans have announced three days of mourning as many take to the street to protest, demanding answers.

Tonight’s tragedy will reverberate far beyond the pitch.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of James Montague.

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