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  1. #1
    You wouldn't know that though because you've demonstrably never picked up a book nor educated yourself on the matter. Let me guess, overweight housewife?
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    Morsi declares state of emergency. Egypt soccer fans worse than Europe....

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/...0a3_story.html

    CAIRO — Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi declared a state of emergency and nighttime curfew across three major cities Sunday after violence raged for a third straight day, leaving nearly 50 dead and hundreds injured nationwide.

    The deployment Saturday of government troops to the coastal cities of Port Said and Suez, which have seen some of the worst violence, failed to quell a public backlash against a court verdict and raised doubts about whether Morsi’s embattled government could contain the situation.

    In a televised address Sunday night, the president said the state of emergency, which allows security forces to arrest and detain at will, would cover Port Said, Suez and Ismailia for 30 days.

    “The protection of the nation is the responsibility of everyone. We will confront any threat to its security with force and firmness within the shadow of the state of the law,” Morsi said.

    Thousands took to the streets of Port Said on Sunday in funeral processions for more than 30 people killed Saturday in clashes between protesters and police, after a court handed down death sentences to 21 people for their involvement in a deadly soccer riot last year.

    Officials said that at least seven more died Sunday in the city, where hundreds have been wounded in two days of fighting. Residents said security forces had contributed to the violence, instead of bringing the situation under control.

    Growing frustration

    The strife in Port Said roughly coincided with the second anniversary of the uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak and with a swell of opposition to Islamist rule. In Cairo, Suez and Ismailia, clashes spawned by anniversary protests against Morsi’s government on Friday carried into Sunday, and opposition groups called for further protests Monday.

    At the heart of the crisis is growing national frustration over the pursuit of justice two years after Mubarak’s fall. Egyptians across the political spectrum complain that the abusive security forces cultivated under his rule have evaded punishment for crimes committed during the uprising and since his ouster.

    Egypt’s court system remains opaque and marred by allegations of corruption and politicized rulings.

    Although the clashes in Port Said occurred in response to the court verdict Saturday, Michael Wahid Hanna, a Middle East expert at the Century Foundation, said the city’s crisis also reflected Egyptians’ growing dissatisfaction with Morsi and the slow pace of reforms.

    “People no longer have confidence in the institutions of the state, and they are willing to exercise that rejection through violence,” Hanna said.

    Only two of the nearly 170 security officials and police officers charged with using violence against civilians during the past two years have been convicted, rights groups say.

    A conflict last month over the religious character of Egypt’s new constitution that pits the Islamist government against a broad liberal and secular opposition has further degraded trust in Morsi.

    The president urged the nation Sunday night to respect the court’s rulings, but Egyptians have increasingly vowed to take matters of justice into their own hands over verdicts deemed unsatisfactory.

    Mayhem in city

    The Port Said riot in February, the deadliest in Egypt’s history, followed a soccer match between Cairo’s al-Ahly club team and Port Said’s al-Masry club team and left 74 people dead. Ahly fans, who claimed most of the victims as their own, threatened violence ahead of Saturday’s verdict in anticipation of light sentences.

    The national defense forces are now deploying women, some of whom have been seen ripping veils off of civilian women.

    But when death sentences followed for the 21 Port Said residents charged in the case, it was Port Said that erupted in anger. Fifty-two security personnel also charged in the incident will not be sentenced until March.

    More than two dozen people were killed Saturday in clashes in Port Said while trying to storm police stations and the prison complex where the defendants were being held.

    “We either redeem them or we die like them,” protesters chanted Sunday during the funeral procession, al-Jazeera’s English-language channel reported.

    Witnesses said the procession quickly turned to mayhem as the crowd approached two resorts used by the police and military and came under fire.

    “The moment we got there, they started shooting at us and tear gas started coming at us from the resorts, so we started throwing rocks,” said protester Mohamed Wefky, whose friend died in the Saturday clashes. Wefky said some of the caskets never made it to the graveyard as the crowd dispersed and clashes ensued. “Some of the martyrs’ bodies are still on the ground, not buried yet,” he said.

    Other witnesses reported seeing protesters and security forces exchanging fire during the clashes Saturday and Sunday. Local media reported that residents also opened fire on police stations.

    Abdel Rahman al-Farah, the director of Port Said’s hospitals, said that about 200 people were injured in the unrest Sunday, most by “suffocation” in the chaos of the crowd. Ten were shot, he said.

    The National Defense Council, a group of security chiefs led by Morsi, deployed military troops to Port Said and Suez on Saturday.

    But as clashes erupted again Sunday, residents of Port Said said there was little sign of the police or the military on the city’s streets, beyond helicopter sightings. The troops mostly kept to their barracks and stations, residents said, as chaos reigned in the streets.

    Meanwhile, violence continued to flare amid thick clouds of tear gas around Cairo’s Tahrir Square and close to government buildings, including the parliament and the state television headquarters. Those battles are a continuation of the violence that erupted between anti-Islamist demonstrators and police on Friday, as opposition groups marched through the city on the anniversary of Egypt’s revolution, calling for Morsi’s ouster.
    /sigh

  2. #2
    Doesn't take it for granite
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    Central America still holds the title for Worst Football Fans.

  3. #3
    I'm not safe on my island
    Nikkei will still get me.

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    Well, at least the article made sense of this to me. Otherwise i would have gotten the impression people were just protesting over soccer.

  4. #4
    You wouldn't know that though because you've demonstrably never picked up a book nor educated yourself on the matter. Let me guess, overweight housewife?
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    Quote Originally Posted by Kuya View Post
    Well, at least the article made sense of this to me. Otherwise i would have gotten the impression people were just protesting over soccer.
    nah, but it's an incident that was the result of a soccer game incident. Comes down to Egyptians being in such a state of unrest they are resorting to violence over anything and everything. It's hard for me to tell, but I think there was some kind of fight in Alexandria yesterday, too. My cousin and her mother were involved I think (she uses a lot of slang in her typing so google translate can only tell me so much).


    I'm more curious, and worried, of what is going to happen with this state of emergency rather than what caused it in the first place.

  5. #5
    blax n gunz
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    There is more to this story than soccer, extremists are coming out of the woodwork to exploit the chaos Morsi has engendered.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013...aults-reported

    Women targeted:

    Amid Egypt's ongoing civil unrest, at least 25 women have been sexually assaulted during clashes in Tahrir Square, according to local women's rights campaigners.

    In a typical attack, crowds of men quickly surround isolated women, groping them and attempting to remove their clothes. Some women have been stripped naked and one was raped, the campaigners said.
    Rape and forced female genital mutilation in Tahrir:

    For four days in Cairo, police armed with teargas have clashed with stone-throwing protesters in and around the crowded Tahrir Square, where the sexual assaults are reported to have taken place.

    "This Friday was one of the worst that we have witnessed [for sexual assaults]," said Leil-Zahra Mortada, a spokesman for Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment (OpAntiSH) , a group set up in November to rescue assault victims from Tahrir Square.

    "All of the cases were really, really bad," Mortada told the Guardian. "But the worst case that we dealt with involved a bladed weapon being used on the private parts of an assaulted woman." OpAntiSH treated 16 women, while Tahrir Bodyguard, another rescue group, helped nine, making a total of 25 – with the two teams hearing reports of at least nine more.
    Fucking animals should be shot.

  6. #6
    You wouldn't know that though because you've demonstrably never picked up a book nor educated yourself on the matter. Let me guess, overweight housewife?
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    Quote Originally Posted by Correction View Post
    There is more to this story than soccer, extremists are coming out of the woodwork to exploit the chaos Morsi has engendered.
    of course there is. I have a feeling the state of emergency us going to make even more Egyptians snap.

  7. #7
    I'll change yer fuckin rate you derivative piece of shit
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    Not sure if democracy suits those who never wore powdered wigs.

  8. #8
    I'm not safe on my island
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    Powdered wigs have a cooling effect on the hot unruly humors of the plebes.

  9. #9
    Bagel
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    Lakshmi

    Savages! Using football as a motivation for revolt! Civilised people are only whipped into a bloody frenzy by operas! (nobody's going to get this one, I know)


    Quote Originally Posted by Kuya
    Powdered wigs have a cooling effect on the hot unruly humors of the plebes.
    That is the very plain-song of it.

  10. #10
    You wouldn't know that though because you've demonstrably never picked up a book nor educated yourself on the matter. Let me guess, overweight housewife?
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    I dunno why me referencing the soccer bit makes you all think I was saying they are savages, but ok sure you guys go with that.

  11. #11
    Bagel
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    Don't read too much into jokes. We weren't saying/thinking that (at least I wasn't); there's just little to say about the situation: Egyptians are (rightfully) on edge* these days and anything can serve as a powderkeg. Football is basically the modern equivalent to the events that sparked our own revolutions (throwing tea in the sea for you guys, watching an opera about a revolution in Naples for us).
    The "savages" was just for humoristic effect.


    *trying to win "understatement of the year".

  12. #12
    You wouldn't know that though because you've demonstrably never picked up a book nor educated yourself on the matter. Let me guess, overweight housewife?
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ashmada View Post
    Don't read too much into jokes.
    I guess I have a hard time seeing the jokes as I have family over there who have to deal with this. D:

    You are right that there isn't much to say on the matter, more posting it to keep people informed of what's going on since the news is all about trying to hump Clinton (both good and bad) over Bengazi.

  13. #13
    The Defense is ready, Your Honor
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    Its okay, Ksan. I'm sure I have distant, distant family in Africa somewhere, starving and murdering one another and raping and killing gays and getting raped and getting killed for being gay and all that.

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