Trump’s presidency bolsters autocrats as Egypt designates soccer icon a terrorist
By James M. Dorsey
An Egyptian government decision to designate soccer icon Mohammed
Aboutreika as a terrorist coupled with the recent arrest of more than 30
militant football fans puts to bed any hopes that general-turned-president
Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi sees the game’s supporters as a way to reach out to his
opponents.
Mr. Al Sisi’s intent to maintain his brutal crackdown on
dissidents was likely bolstered by a perceived change of attitude of the United
States with the rise of President Donald J. Trump, who is expected to
prioritize counter-terrorism over respect for human rights.
In a telephone conversation this week, Mr. Trump promised
Mr. Al-Sisi, who met the president in New York in September and was the first
Muslim head of state to congratulate him on his election victory, that the
United States was committed to supporting Egypt in its fight against political
violence.
"The U.S. President also expressed during the call his
looking forward to the President's awaited visit to Washington which is being
prepared for through diplomatic channels," Mr. Al-Sisi's spokesman, Alaa
Youssef, said in a statement.
The designation of Mr. Aboutreika, a retired four-time
African Footballer of the Year nicknamed The Magician, the arrest of the 20 fans
of storied Cairo club Al Zamalek SC for attempting to force their way into a
training session of their team, and clashes with supporters of Zamalek arch rival
Al Ahli SC in which two policemen were injured after authorities detained 13
Ahli fans for attempting to force their way into a training session of their
team, came as part of a wider crackdown.
The 20 Zamalek fans were detained for demanding during an
Egypt-Tunisia match the prosecution of club president Mortada Mansour. The fans
raised a banner saying “311 days since the massacre at the Air Defense stadium,
prosecute Mortada Mansour,” a reference to clashes with security forces in February
last year in which some 20 Zamalek fans were killed.
A larger than life member of parliament, Mr. Mansour, who
unsuccessfully campaigned for the banning of militant soccer fan groups as
terrorist organizations, justified the deaths, claiming that he had requested security
forces to act against what he termed members of the Brotherhood.
Egyptian stadia have been closed to the public with the
exception of controlled and limited access to international matches for much of
the last six years in a bid to prevent them from again becoming platforms for
anti-government protest.
Mr. Aboutreika, a supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood whose
assets were frozen last year on charges that he had funded the outlawed group,
was one of 1,500 public figures designated last week by a Cairo court.
Mr. Aboutreika drew the ire of authorities for supporting
militant fans in the wake of suspected tacit military and security force association
with a brawl in a Port Said stadium in 2012 in which 72 Ahli supporters died.
The former midfielder who captained Egypt’s nation team
during a decade in which won three African titles also expressed support for
Brotherhood demonstrators, hundreds of whom were killed in a brutal crackdown
on Cairo’s Rabaa al-Adawiya Square following the 2013 military coup in which
Mr. Al-Sisi toppled Mohammed Morsi, a Brother and Egypt’s first and only
democratically elected president.
Mr. Aboutreika, who is based in Qatar, has denied being a
member of the Brotherhood and has said he would appeal his designation.
Egypt has listed the Brotherhood as a terrorist organisation
and jailed thousands of its supporters since Mr. Al-Sisi removed Mr. Morsi from
office following mass protests against his rule. A 1986 research paper by the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) cautioned that “a weakened Brotherhood…is
likely to strengthen Islamic extremists who are even less accommodating to the
United States,” an expression of concern that a repressive regime’s suppression
of the Brotherhood would fuel radicalization.
The designation of the 1,500 and the arrests coincided with
the detention of nine alleged leaders of the Brotherhood on charges of planning
to "disrupt order and security" on tomorrow’s anniversary of the 2011
popular revolt that forced president Hosni Mubarak to resign after 30 years in
office. Militant, highly politicized soccer fans played a key role in the
revolt.
The interior ministry asserted that the men had "aimed
at provoking public opinion by exploiting the economic situation the country is
going through and coordinating with extremist entities." Mr. Al-Sisi has
seen his popularity drop in recent months amid intermittent protests against
the pain of a deteriorating economy, sharply rising prices and commodity
shortages, and austerity measures designed to rein in unsustainable spending on
subsidies and allow Egypt’s currency to float freely.
The designation of Mr. Aboutreika and the arrests signals an
end to intermittent attempts by Mr. Al-Sisi to reach out the fans and through them
to frustrated Egyptian youth.
In an unprecedented gesture, Mr. Al-Sisi reached out last
year to Ultras Ahlawy, the militant, street-battle hardened support group of Al
Ahli. In a first recognition of the potential power of the fans, Mr. Al-Sisi
phoned in to a television programme on the fourth anniversary of the Port Said
incident to invite militant fans to appoint ten of their members to
independently investigate the incident.
It was the first time Mr. Al-Sisi had reached out to his
opponents, many of whom have been killed by the interior ministry’s security
forces, forced underground or into exile, or are lingering in prisons where
they risk abuse and torture. Ultras Ahlawy declined the invitation saying it
could not be accuser and judge at the same time but kept the door to a dialogue
open.
With soccer fans having been at the core of mass student
protests against Mr. Al-Sisi in 2013 and 2014 that were brutally crushed by
security forces who turned universities into fortresses, the government accelerated
the move of government offices, including the prosecutor-general’s office,
state security, judicial bodies and a new police academy.
“The security situation is connected to the targeting of
these institutions by a number of protesters centred in downtown Cairo. They
seek to spread chaos throughout the country… And they’re attempting to break
the aura of authority around state institutions by putting them under siege,
covering their walls with graffiti of vulgar images and language degrading to
those who work there… The security challenges the country is going through have
forced the ministry to accelerate its construction plans,” said General Ahmad
al-Badry, the former head of the Police Academy, at last year’s inauguration of
the new academy.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of
Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent
World of Middle East Soccer blog, a book
with the same title, Comparative Political Transitions
between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, co-authored with Dr.
Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and a forthcoming book, Shifting
Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa
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