The dispute between Egypt and Algeria over World Cup
qualifiers played in Cairo and Khartoum should never have happened. Both
countries should have taken a united stand against football’s worldwide scourge
-- hooliganism. Being an enthusiastic fan is one thing, but it’s quite another
to translate that natural enthusiasm into violence against players and
supporters. Such behavior does not equate to patriotism. It’s simply a stain on
a nation’s reputation and discredits the sport itself.
Intense rivalry between two sides fiercely competing for a
World Cup place that has eluded them for decades is understandable. But that
competitive spirit should revolve around players’ skills and tenacity rather
than who can throw the biggest rocks, shout the loudest invective, or burn the
most flags.
A lot of people got hurt in this debacle. After their bus
was hit by projectiles in Cairo, images of Algerian players with blood
streaming down their faces were captured on a mobile phone while some 20 more
Algerians were attacked in Egypt.
Then, during a spate of tit-for-tat attacks, Egyptian
businesses in the Algerian capital were trashed -- including Orascom, owned by
billionaire Naguib Sawaris -- and ordinary Egyptians were attacked in southern
Algeria as well as in Sudan.
It’s unfortunate, too, that Egyptians heading for the
Algerian Embassy in Cairo to vent their ire saw fit to smash shop windows and
damage cars that belong to their compatriots. If Algeria was the object of
their displeasure then their motive for destroying and setting fire to Egyptian-owned
property escapes me.
The fact is that hooligans of whatever nationality don’t
require a motive. All they need is a flimsy excuse to inflict their pent-up
aggression on anyone and anything that happens to cross their path. Yet, very
often, because they are perceived by authorities as football fans rather than
anti-government elements or religious extremists, they get away with it.
It’s unfortunate that neither side has made any effort to be
conciliatory. On the contrary, one Algerian player told the Egyptians something
on the lines of ‘Shut-up, we won, so get over it!’ In the meantime, instead of
offering recompense to Orascom, which employs thousands of Algerians and
services 10 million mobile subscribers, the Algerian authorities chose this
sensitive moment to slap the multi-national with a $600 million bill for back
taxes.
Egypt responded by recalling its ambassador to Algiers for
“consultations” and warning that it will not allow its citizens to be harmed or
humiliated. Even Sudan has jumped into the melee by summoning Egypt’s envoy in
Khartoum to protest reports in the Egyptian media maligning its security
arrangements.
It would be a great shame if this bitterness were allowed to
fester. It’s actually much ado about nothing, although most Egyptians and
Algerians don’t see it that way. For them, their national pride is at stake
although, in reality, there should be no pride in mindless violence committed
by crazed hooligans; national or otherwise. National pride does not reside in
the abilities of overpaid, trumped-up youth to kick a ball into a net. It
should, instead, rest in a country’s technological, scientific, medical,
artistic, literary, educational, architectural and economic achievements along
with the standard of living enjoyed by its people, its record of human rights
and the humanitarian values upon which it stands. When future historians write
of our era, they won’t be appraising nations based on the number of football
matches won. In the great scheme of things, last week’s play-offs have less
meaning than a single reed floating down a stream.
In the end, football is just a game that has been turned
into the new opiate of the masses. It generally offers the opportunity for
people to blow off steam in a controlled environment. It gives man an outlet
for his inherent warlike instincts. It’s entertaining, exciting and fun. But
it’s not brain surgery.
When Arab history is writ, it will feature such names as Dr.
Magdy Yacoub, Ben Bella, Gamal Abdul Nasser, Anwar Sadat, King Abdul Aziz,
Yasser Arafat, Ahmed Zewail, Naguib Mahfouz, Umm Kulthum, Ibn Sina (Avicenna)
and Ibn Battuta. In 50 years time, will anyone even remember the names Mohamed
Zidan or Antar Yahia? This isn’t meant to demean these excellent Egyptian and
Algerian players; rather to put their achievements into perspective.
The mesmerizing effect that soccer has on people around the
world is worrying. It sends them to sleep in such a way that they are immune to
serious issues. This was particularly evident in Egypt when Israel invaded
Lebanon in the summer of 2006 when televisions in Cairo cafes were invariably
tuned to Zamalek-Al Ahli matches on local stations rather than satellite news
channels. It was a similar story when Gaza was being bombed last winter. Where
was the outrage on the so-called Arab street then? Where was the national pride
when women and children were being incinerated? At a time when Arab unity has
rarely been as crucial, Algerians and Egyptians need to rearrange their
priorities.
This tiff has been greatly overblown and should be buried
sooner rather than later. Both countries share so much. Both are predominately
Muslim. Both are Arab. Both are African and both are battling religious
extremism. They share a history of foreign occupation and revolution. They
should remember how they came together to free Algeria from the French yoke and
how they fought side by side during the 1973 war with Israel. Are they
seriously going to allow soccer thugs to tear them apart?
As someone who has lived for extensive periods in both
countries, where I had the opportunity to make so many cherished Algerian and
Egyptian friends, I feel personally pained at this growing divide over nothing.
If they only knew it, both peoples have so much in common in terms of family
values, hospitality, warmth, generosity and good humor. They also share a
hot-tempered nature when they feel their dignity has been impugned, which is
the driving force behind the current contretemps.
Their Arab friends should work toward reconciling the two
parties once the heat of the moment has dissipated. In the words of President
Anwar Sadat, “There can be hope only for a society which acts as one big
family, not as many separate ones.”
Linda
S. Heard is a British specialist writer on Middle East affairs. She welcomes
feedback and can be contacted by email at heardonthegrapevines@yahoo.co.uk.