http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=2&article_id=108924


Egypt recalls ambassador from Algeria as soccer bitterness escalates


Friday, November 20, 2009 

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Maamoun Youssef

Associated Press 



CAIRO: Egypt on Thursday recalled its ambassador to Algeria for consultations 
as part of a growing diplomatic row caused by a bitter soccer rivalry between 
the two Arab nations that has sparked violence among fans. Egyptian fans were 
attacked after Algeria won a make-or-break World Cup qualifying game Wednesday 
in the Sudanese capital Khartoum, and offices of Egyptian companies in Algeria 
were ransacked after a matchup in Cairo over the weekend.

On Thursday, Egypt's Foreign Ministry summoned Algeria's ambassador in Cairo to 
express to him its "extreme dismay" over the attacks. Egypt's ambassador in 
Algiers, Abdel-Aziz Seif al-Nasr, was instructed to return to Egypt as soon as 
possible, according to a ministry statement. It gave no further details.

Algeria advanced to the World Cup for the first time since 1986 after its 1-0 
victory in Wednesday's game. That match was a playoff after Egypt won 
Saturday's game in Cairo, 2-0. Ahead of Saturday's game, Egyptian fans pelted a 
bus carrying Algerian players soon after their arrival in Cairo.

Three players were injured and two of them played with head bandages. Clashes 
between Egyptian and Algerian fans after the game injured 32.

A separate official Egyptian statement Thursday said the summoning to the 
foreign ministry of the Algerian ambassador, Abdel-Qader Hajar, was ordered by 
President Hosni Mubarak himself.

The Egyptian leader also chaired a top-level meeting Thursday to look into the 
situation in Khartoum, to which thousands of Egyptian fans traveled, according 
to the statement.

It said that most of the fans have returned safely to Egypt, but made a brief 
mention of the "difficulties" encountered by some on the way to Khartoum's 
airport.

Egyptian media reports said several buses carrying Egypt fans to the airport 
were pelted with rocks, allegedly by Algerians, and that several of them were 
slightly hurt.

It was sweet revenge for the Algerians. Egypt qualified to the 1990 World Cup 
at their expense, beating them in a decider played in Cairo in 1989.

Wednesday's win sent thousands of people celebrating on the streets of Algiers, 
Paris and the French port city of Marseilles. France is home to a large 
Algerian community.

In contrast, Cairo was subdued after Wednesday's game, with only several 
hundred noisy fans protesting near the Algerian Embassy against the attacks on 
Egyptians in Sudan and Algeria.

The protest went until the early hours Thursday, but a riot police cordon kept 
protesters away from the embassy.

Headlines in Cairo's Thursday newspapers reflected the soccer-mad nation's 
disappointment at the failure to reach the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, with 
front-page photos of tearful Egyptian players.

"The World Cup dream turned into ruins," said the independent Al-Masry Al-Youm 
daily.

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