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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Verdict in soccer riot sparks deadly clashes

At least 30 dead as Egypt’s political unrest continues

Families and supporters of those convicted react Saturday to the announcement of guilty verdicts for 21 fans in last year’s Port Said, Egypt, soccer stadium riot that left 74 people dead. (Associated Press)
Jeffrey Fleishman Los Angeles Times

CAIRO – Deadly clashes and an attempted jailbreak erupted in the Egyptian city of Port Said after 21 soccer fans were sentenced to death for killing rivals in a riot last year that underlined the nation’s wider unrest and deepening political schisms.

At least 30 people were reported killed Saturday, including two police officers. Buildings burned and mobs ran through the streets, hoisting the wounded and chanting against the government. Concern intensified that protesters would take up weapons smuggled in from Libya and Sudan.

The violence, which followed Friday’s deadly riots around the country against the Islamist-led government, revealed how frayed and frantic Egypt has become two years after the toppling of Hosni Mubarak. The economy is faltering amid growing disdain for President Mohammed Morsi and his increasingly isolated party linked to the Muslim Brotherhood.

A succession of crises has overwhelmed Egypt’s transition toward democracy and made evident that Islamist political forces have failed to provide a unifying vision that encapsulates the hopes of a revolution that ended 30 years of corrupt rule. Instead, firebombs flare at barricades, riot police hunker, and mothers trail the coffins of fallen sons.

Gunshots and tear gas volleys rang out in Port Said between security forces and supporters of the Masry soccer club after the death sentences were read. Families attempted to storm the jail where their relatives and former police officials were imprisoned on charges of killing 74 people in the stadium melee last year.

Port Said has become a dangerous subplot to Egypt’s political turmoil. Many residents believe security forces instigated the soccer riot. The bloodshed Saturday indicated that police – the symbol of Mubarak’s repression – remained deeply reviled and in disarray. The army deployed troops to the city to protect the prison and other government buildings from looting and arson.

“What’s happening in Port Said today makes me question right from wrong,” said activist Heba Mahfouz, 23. “We never really had an appreciation for law enforcement. There is an emotional line that has been broken between Egyptians. We are now killing each other.”

Clashes also broke out in Cairo, where men and boys hurled Molotov cocktails and tried to overrun the upper house of the parliament. Soldiers guarded the streets in Suez, where the fire department was set alight and prisoners escaped from a police station after it was attacked by mobs. At least seven people, including two police officers, were killed in Suez on Friday.

Morsi has not addressed the country since the nationwide violence began late Thursday. He tweeted on Friday that “state agencies will not hesitate to prosecute offenders and bring them to justice.”

His National Defense Council released a statement Saturday expressing “its sorrow and condolences for what has happened and those who died across the country.”

The tumult comes as Morsi is attempting to allay international concern about his handling of the country. Egypt desperately needs foreign investments and grants to ease public debt and revive the economy. Cairo is awaiting a $4.8 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund. The deepening unrest has not inspired confidence.

The verdict in the soccer riot case was expected to be a spark for bloodshed.

The accused Masry fans were charged in the deaths of 74 fans of Cairo’s Ahly soccer club during a match in Port Said in February. Masry supporters went on a rampage with knives and pipes, trapping Ahly fans in a locked stadium. Many were trampled to death, and some died after tumbling from the stadium’s balconies. More than 1,000 people were injured.

Hard-core Ahly supporters, known as Ultras, recently threatened to attack police and government institutions across the country if death penalties were not handed down.

Former police officers charged in the case are expected to be sentenced in March. The Ahly Ultras say security forces orchestrated the stadium attack as retribution for the group’s long resistance to the police state and its role in the uprising that brought down Mubarak.