Attempts to ban Egyptian militant football fan group gather momentum

Daily News Egypt
9 Min Read
James M. Dorsey
James M. Dorsey

By James M. Dorsey

An Egyptian prosecutor has set the stage for the banning of a group of hard-core, militant football fans by charging them with accepting money and explosives from the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood to stage last month’s Cairo football riot in which 22 people were killed.

The Prosecutor General, Hisham Barakat, said the brawl, which erupted when police forces opened fire with tear gas and birdshot to prevent members of the highly politicised, street battle-hardened Ultras White Knights (UWK), the support group of storied Zamalek SC, from forcing entry into a football match was staged to obstruct government efforts to attract massive foreign aid and investment.

The match was the first Egyptian Premier League game after a partial lifting of a ban on spectators attending matches imposed in February 2012 when 74 supporters of Zamalek arch rival Al-Ahly SC were killed in a politically loaded brawl in Port Said.

Football fans have long been on the radar of the security forces because of their key role in the toppling in a popular revolt in 2011 of President Hosni Mubarak; their opposition to the subsequent military government that ruled Egypt for the first 17 months after the fall of Mubarak; and their resistance to the governments of democratically elected President Mohammed Morsi, a Muslim Brother, and the military-backed governments that followed a military coup against Morsi headed by general-turned-president Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi in 2013.

Ultras Nahdawy, the only fan group that is not aligned with a football club and has explicitly defined itself as political, has played an important role in persistent anti-government protests on university campuses in the past year. Formerly supportive of the Muslim Brotherhood, Nahdawy which was formed by members of the UWK and Ultras Ahlawy, the Al-Ahly support group, has insisted that it has distanced itself from the group after the Brotherhood was banned as a terrorist organisation in the wake of Morsi’s ouster.

Security forces this month arrested 52 students and UWK members who participated in a protest at Fayoum University. Twenty one of those arrested were handed over to the prosecution on charges of belonging to a terrorist organisation and violating Egypt’s draconic anti-protest law. A general strike demanding the release of the students and fans has since all but shut the university down.

Separately, a UWK leader, Said Moshagheb, was arrested recently on charges of being part of a UWK group that stormed Zamalek’s offices and tried to assassinate the club’s controversial president, Mortada Mansour, a long standing associate of Mubarak and Al-Sisi. The UWK has confirmed the storming but repeatedly denied having attempted to kill Mansour, who claimed that he had been attacked with acid last October as he introduced Zamalek’s new coach.

A video released by the UWK shows a man slapping Mansour, whom the fans have dubbed “a dog of the system”, in a parking lot. In a statement, the UWK said they had thrown urine rather than acid at the Zamalek president. Moshagheb’s trial is scheduled to begin on Saturday.

Mortada has prided himself on last month asking the security forces to intervene to prevent fans from entering the Cairo stadium, charging that UWK had been paid to confront the security forces. In response to a journalist’s question about how fans of his club had died, Mortada said: “Ask the Muslim Brotherhood.”

The charging of 16 UWK members and Muslim Brothers with responsibility for the Cairo football stadium incident follows failed attempts by Mansour to persuade the courts to outlaw the fan group as a terrorist organisation. Two courts rejected Mansour’s petition, saying they were not the competent authority. A lawyer for the UWK charged that the prosecution was moving ahead with proceedings against the group while ignoring petitions he filed on behalf of the UWK against Mansour and recently dismissed interior minister Mohamed Ibrahim.

The indictment coincided with the sentencing to death of Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie and 21 other members of the banned movement in two separate cases over incitement to violence. The 21 were convicted on charges of setting up an “operations room” to prepare attacks against the state in the weeks after the military ousted Morsi. The verdict, which can be appealed, was referred to Al-Azhar, Egypt’s top Sunni Muslim authority, that under Egyptian law has to give a non-binding advisory opinion on the death sentences.

In a statement, General Prosecutor Barakat said that “the prosecution’s investigation proved that the terrorist Muslim Brotherhood, as part of its endeavour to bring down the pillars of stability of the country, used its relationship with cadres of the Zamalek club’s fan group, the White Knights” to instigate the Cairo incident. It said the riot aimed to undermine the government’s attempts to raise billions of dollars in foreign aid and investment at a conference attended in Sharm El-Sheikh recently by heads of state and industry leaders.

The statement asserted further: “Some of the suspects who belong to the Muslim Brotherhood have confessed to planning, funding and participating in these crimes to create a state of security destabilisation and ruin the Economic Summit.”

If so, the collaboration between the UWK and the Brotherhood would constitute a break with a fundamental principle of the group that is upheld by ultras or militant football fans across the globe, that they do not constitute political groupings. Ultras Nahdawy is the exception that confirms the rule even if the very nature of ultras groups makes them political despite their denials.

The emphasis on being non-political allows groups of ultras to maintain unity on their core principles – a passion for football, hard core support of their club and a distrust of authority and police and security forces – despite the fact that the political views of individual members can run the gamut from far left to far right and secular to religious.

CairoScene, an Egyptian news website, quipped that the assertion of a conspiracy between the UWK and the Brotherhood “seems ridiculous considering there was clear evidence that security was mismanaged. Fans were forced to enter through one singular metal cage, which ultimately collapsed. At the same time police fired tear gas at the crowds arguably fuelling the stampede that resulted in many of the deaths. Obviously, we cannot confirm the prosecutions claims, but believe that some of the responsibility of this tragedy should fall on the shoulders of the security officials, as they clearly failed to provide security.”

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, a syndicated columnist, and the author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog and a forthcoming book with the same title

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