
Egypt – AFP – 2/8/2015 – Twenty-two people died as thousands of fans tried to force their way into a Cairo football stadium Sunday to watch a game.
Witnesses and medical reports suggested many of the victims were crushed in a stampede, with some suffering broken necks. At least 25 other people were injured, the health ministry said.
The match continued despite the violence, provoking further outrage among the fans.
The clashes prompted the government to postpone the Egyptian Premier League indefinitely, the prime minister’s office said in a statement.
The match between Zamalek and Enbi had been open to the public, unlike most other games between Egyptian clubs since stadium riots in Port Said in 2012 left more than 70 people dead in the country’s worst ever sport disaster.
The interior ministry had restricted to 10,000 the number of spectators allowed into the stadium on Sunday, and tickets quickly ran out.
Thousands of fans without tickets scaled the stadium walls before police dispersed them, according to the ministry.
Zamalek supporters aimed fireworks at the police, who fired tear gas and birdshot back, police and witnesses said.
“There was a police car on fire and they were shooting tear gas,” a witness told AFP.
After a preliminary exam, 19 of the dead were found to have no gunshot wounds, according to a health ministry official. Injuries were consistent with being crushed in a stampede, and some of the dead had broken necks.
An AFP correspondent outside the morgue saw coroner reports handed out saying two of those killed died of “extreme pressure to the chest”.
Many of those injured suffered broken bones and bruising, the health ministry said according to state news agency MENA.