21/11/2009 The "war" between Egypt and Algeria doesn't seem to near its end…
The football match that joined the two countries on Wednesday didn't end in the same day. The Arab World is still witnessing its "repercussions" until the moment with Egyptian and Algerian people exchanging accusations over "attacks" that followed it…
Previously, everyone used to pattern after the so-called "sportsmanship" especially that in sports, there is always a winner but also a loser… However, and unfortunately, everything changed and the sports are being "politicized" these days, at the time a "sport battle" between Egypt and Algeria turned to be a "political one" with a real "diplomatic crisis" taking place between the two Arab countries.
On Saturday, one day after Egypt summoned the Algerian ambassador in Cairo and recalled its envoy in Algiers, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak took his decision to enter Egypt's bitter soccer row with Algeria and vowed in a televised speech that attacks on Egyptians abroad will not be tolerated.
Mubarak did not mention Algeria by name in his previously scheduled address to parliament, but it was clear he was referring to the fierce soccer rivalry that boiled over into violence when the two Arab nations met in two crucial World Cup qualifiers on November 14 and 18.
Egyptian fans incensed by media reports of Algerian attacks after Wednesday's match in Sudan rioted in central Cairo on Thursday night and into Friday morning. Clashing with hundreds of police in an attempt to reach the Algerian Embassy, they threw rocks and smashed car and shop windows. The tension in the streets has also reached the diplomatic level, with Egypt bringing home its ambassador to Algeria.
"I want to say in clear words that the dignity of Egyptians is part of the dignity of Egypt," a visibly angry Mubarak told a joint session of parliament's two houses. "Egypt does not tolerate those who hurt the dignity of its sons," he said, without saying whether his government planned to take punitive measures against Algeria.
Yet, he pledged that Egypt will be firm in dealing with attacks on its nationals. "Egypt will not be lax with those who harm the dignity of its sons," he told cheering MPs in parliament. "The welfare of our citizens abroad is the responsibility of the country. We look after their rights and reject violations and transgressions against them," he said in his first apparent reference to the diplomatic row with Algiers.
Algeria won the second, make-or-break playoff match 1-0 to reach next year's World Cup in South Africa. The trouble began before the first match in Cairo when Egyptian fans pelted a bus carrying the Algerian team. Three Algerian players were injured and two of them played with bandages on their heads. Fan violence after that match injured more than 32 people. Algerian fans also attacked the offices of Egyptian companies in Algeria, prompting hundreds of Egyptians fearing for their safety to return home, according to reports in official Egyptian media.
Lawmakers applauded Mubarak's comments Saturday. When egged on by lawmakers who apparently wanted him to directly threaten Algeria, Mubarak briefly departed from his prepared text. "We don't want to be drawn into impulsive reactions. I am agitated too, but I restrain myself," he said.
Egypt has recalled its ambassador to Algeria for consultations and summoned the Algerian ambassador in Cairo to express to him its dismay over the attacks in Khartoum and Algeria.
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