Port Said clashes: A foretaste of Egyptian soccer violence to come
Soccer clashes at Port Said student hostel (Credit: Aswat Masriya)
By James M. Dorsey
Clashes this week between rival soccer fans in Port Said in
which 55 people were injured gave Egypt a foretaste of expected violence later
this month when a Cairo court announces its verdict in the trial of 73 people
accused of responsibility for last year’s death of 74 fans in a politically
loaded brawl in the Suez Canal city.
The expected verdict on January 26 puts the government of
President Mohammed Morsi in a no-win situation as it struggles to re-launch
Egypt’s professional soccer on February 1, a year after the 74 fans of crowned
Cairo club Al Ahli SC died in violence in the Port Said stadium after a match
against the city’s Al Masri SC.
The brawl was widely seen as an attempt that got out of hand
to cut down to size militant, highly politicized, street battle-hardened fan
groups, who played a key role in last year’s overthrow of president Hosni
Mubarak, subsequent often violent rejection of military rule and current
opposition to the Morsi government. Egypt’s militant fans or ultras constitute
one of the country’s largest civic groups after Mr. Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood.
This week’s violence in which rival groups threw rocks and
Molotov cocktails erupted when Al Masri supporters clashed with pro-Al Ahli
students at a Port Said University hostel who hoisted the Cairo club’s flag
from their windows and balconies as well as the hostel’s roof, according to
Egypt’s state-run Middle East News Agency (MENA). Four police officers were
among the injured.
Al Masri fans and nine mid-level security officers are among
those on trial in Cairo. Fans are certain to protest whatever the court
decides. If the 73 accused or a substantial number of them are sentenced, Al
Masri fans are certain to take to the streets. If however all or a substantial
number of them are acquitted, Al Ahli fans will protest vehemently.
Ultras Ahlawy, the Cairo club’s militant fan group, has
vowed to prevent the resumption of professional soccer as long as justice has
not been served in the case of the 74 deaths, most of whom were supporters of
their group. The ultras have in recent months occupied the head office of the
Egyptian Football Association (EFA) on several occasions, stormed the Al Ahli
training ground, forced the freezing of assets and imposition of a travel ban
on Al Ahli chairman Hassan Hamdi by the Illegal Gains Authority on charges of
corruption and attacked the premises of media organizations they deemed
hostile.
The risk of violence is enhanced by the fact that even if
the Cairo court rules in favor of Al Ahli, the verdict is unlikely to meet
conditions the fans have set for a resumption of Egyptian soccer. The ultras
have demanded in addition to serving justice in the Port Said case that the police
and security forces, their nemesis and the most despised institutions in Egypt
because of their role in enforcing the repression of the Mubarak government, be
exempted from responsibility for security in stadiums; the police and security
forces be thoroughly reformed; Mubarak era officials be removed from soccer
boards and an end to corruption in the sport.
The fans are also unhappy with the conditions on which the
EFA last week agreed with the ministers of interior and sport to resume
professional soccer on February 1. In particular, the fans reject the exclusion
of the public from initial matches at the behest of the interior ministry which
is in charge of the police and security forces. The ministry insisted that fans
be excluded because it fears that clashes with the militants would further
tarnish the image of the police and the security forces.
Much of the post-Mubarak violence stems from clashes between
the militants and security forces. Their battle is a battle for karama or
dignity. Their dignity is vested in their ability to stand up to the dakhliya
or interior ministry, the knowledge that they no longer can be abused by
security forces without recourse and the fact that they no longer have to pay
off each and every policemen to stay out of trouble.
That dignity is unlikely to be fully restored until the
police and security forces have been reformed – a task Mr. Morsi’s government
has so far largely shied away from. The foot-dragging in holding security
officers accountable in the case of Port Said and the deaths of hundreds of
protesters in the last two years has reinforced the perception of the police
and security forces as an institution that in the words of scholars Eduardo P.
Archetti and Romero Amilcar is “exclusively destined to harm, wound, injure,
or, in some cases, kill other persons.”
Reforming the police however is no mean task and is likely
to prove far more difficult than Mr. Morsi’s taming of the military last summer
by sidelining the country’s two most senior military commanders with the help
of the next echelon of officers. Reform will have to mean changing from top to
bottom the culture of a force that is larger than the military and counts
450,000 policemen and 350,000 members of the General Security and Central
Security Forces.
James M. Dorsey is a
senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies and the
author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog
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