Khaleej Times

Soccer matches to test Egypt security

Spectators will be allowed in as ban is lifted

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cairo — Two internatio­nal football matches, including a World Cup playoff, are set to take place in Egypt’s turbulent capital, putting security there to the test after violent street protests and bloody security crackdowns followed a military coup.

Football has long been intertwine­d with Egypt’s political unrest, even before the protests that forced autocrat Hosni Mubarak from power in 2011. Fans often clashed with security forces inside and outside stadiums during his more than two-decade rule. But in the time since Mubarak’s ouster, the unrest has become deadly and concerns have grown over whether Egypt can host high-profile football matches amid the unrest.

Egypt’s home match against Ghana deciding which African team will go to Brazil next year will be on November 19 in the military-owned stadium in the capital. In a test run for security forces, Cairo’s Al Ahly club will host South Africa’s Orlando Pirates in the second leg of their African Champions League final this weekend in the same stadium.

In a sign of confidence, authoritie­s lifted the ban on spectators, saying fans will be allowed into the 30,000-seat stadium for both matches — the first internatio­nal football match in Cairo in two years. It’s also the first home game in Egypt hosting a huge crowd since a riot at a club match in Port Said in 2012 killed 74 people, mostly Al Ahly fans.

However, Saturday’s Egypt Cup final between Ahly’s arch rivals, Zamalek, and another Cairo club, Wadi Degla, will be behind closed doors and far away from the capi-

Many of those people who were sad because we lost a match were never sad for all those who died

Hussein Khaled, a student

tal. Zamalek’s hard-line fans, known as Ultras White Knights, said they will defy the spectators ban, vowing in a statement posted on their Facebook page that “fans attendance at the Egypt Cup final is neither debatable nor negotiable.” “The Ultras White Knights will be on the battlefiel­d,” the fans said.

Politics run deep in football in Egypt. Al Ahly’s fans, also known as ultras, prominentl­y participat­ed in the 2011 demonstrat­ions against Mubarak. They frequently clashed with police inside and outside stadiums during his rule.

But the Port Said riot showed fans’ dark side. More violence erupted this year when a court acquitted seven police officers over the melee while confirming death sentences for 21 rioters. Fans rampaged through the heart of Cairo, storming the Egyptian Football Associatio­n’s headquarte­rs and setting it ablaze.

Al Ahly have played all of their Champions League group-stage matches behind closed doors and far away in the Red Sea resort of El Gouna, about 430 kilometres south of Cairo. The Egypt Cup final will be played in front of empty stands there on Saturday.

But it’s the national team’s final match of World Cup campaign later this month that is putting American Bob Bradley’s side and the military authoritie­s under pres- sure. Egypt’s surprising­ly one-sided 6-1 loss to Ghana in the first leg of the playoff caused much fury in the battered nation.

Many supporters of ousted President Mohammed Mursi and his leadership are pleased that the national team is likely to miss Brazil next year, saying that the military leadership would gain politicall­y if the Pharaohs qualify for the World Cup.

Hussein Khaled, an 18-year-old high school student, said he’s upset over the public being more worried about the Pharaohs’ loss than the security crackdown and killing of Mursi supporters.

“Many of those people who were sad because we lost a match were never sad for all those who died,” Khaled said.

With ongoing unrest, Ghana’s Football Federation again appealed to FIFA to move the match to a neutral venue. Football’s governing body last week declared Cairo safe enough to host the match.

The Air Defense Stadium, where the two matches will be played, is part of a military-owned sporting complex in eastern Cairo.

The stadium was last on internatio­nal display in October when Egyptian military leaders staged an extravagan­t celebratio­n to mark 40th anniversar­y of the start of the 1973 Mideast war with Israel. —

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