Thursday, February 2, 2012

MORE THAN 75 PEOPLE DIED IN EGYPT FOOTBALL VIOLENT INVASION


Television pictures showed fans swarming over the pitch after a match in the Egyptian city of Port Said

At least 73 football fans have been killed and 1,000 others left injured after riots broke out at a match in Egypt.
Seconds after the referee blew his whistle, supporters swarmed onto the pitch throwing stones, fireworks and bottles at rival fans, players and security officers in the city of Port Said, officials said.
It was the worst incident of soccer violence in Egypt and the deadliest worldwide since 1996.

It is the biggest disaster in the country’s football history, said the Egyptian deputy health minister.
Egyptian fans clash with riot police after a shock result in the country's premier league
“This is unfortunate and deeply saddening,” Hesham Sheiha told state television.
Some of the dead were security officers, the Associated Press news agency quoted a morgue official as saying.
The BBC’s Jon Leyne in Cairo said it appeared some fans had taken knives into the stadium.
He said the lack of the usual level of security in the stadium might have contributed to the clashes.
Police in Egypt have been keeping a much lower profile since last year’s popular protests that ousted President Hosni Mubarak from power.

Egyptian fans are notoriously violent, particularly supporters of Al-Ahly, who are known as the Ultras.
They have been heavily implicated in the political confrontations recently, the report added.
Football fans in Egypt can be violent, and certainly there is a bitter rivalry between these two teams.
The Al-Ahly fans have a particular reputation for violence.
The Egyptian army was being airlifted in by helicopter to rescue stranded players who became trapped in the changing rooms
But lately they have been at the forefront of clashes with the police.
Wednesday’s violence broke out at the end of the match, which, unusually, Port Said side Masry won 3-1.
As the match ended, their fans flooded onto the pitch attacking Ahly players and fans.

A small group of riot police tried to protect the players, but were overwhelmed.
Part of the stadium was set on fire.
Reaction: Egypt's state prosecutor ordered an immediate investigation into the violence, and the Egypt Football Association ordered an indefinite suspension of the annual championship
Helicopters were sent to Port Said to transport injured fans.

“This is not football. This is a war and people are dying in front of us,” Al-Ahly player Mohamed Abo Treika said.
All premier league matches have been cancelled and the newly-elected Egyptian parliament is to hold an emergency session on Thursday, state TV announced.
Warring fans flee from a fire in the stadium as dozens were killed and more than 1,000 left injured

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