At least 1,000 people were injured in the violence on Wednesday when soccer fans staged a pitch invasion in the Mediterranean city of Port Said, even though local team al-Masry beat visitors from Cairo, Al Ahli, Egypt's most successful club. Angry politicians karen millen denounced the lack of security at the match and blamed military leaders for allowing, or even causing, the tragedy. The Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist group that dominates parliament, saw an "invisible" hand at work. The city's streets were quiet at dawn, with hardly any police or army officers in sight. "The military council wants
karen millen dresses to prove that the country is heading towards chaos and destruction. They are Mubarak's men. They are applying his strategy when he said 'choose me or choose chaos'," said Mahmoud el-Naggar, 30, a laboratory technician and member of the Coalition of the Revolutionary Youth in Port Said. "Down with military rule," thousands of Egyptians chanted at the main Cairo train station where they met injured
karen millen sale fans returning from what a minister said was the scene of Egypt's worst soccer disaster. Hundreds of protesters gathered outside the state television building and marches across the capital were planned. Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, 76, who heads the ruling military council, took an unusual step of speaking by telephone to
http://www.karenmillendressesonlines.com a television channel, the sport broadcaster owned by Al Ahli club, vowing to track down the culprits. The army announced three days of national mourning. "I deeply regret what happened at the football match in Port Said. I offer my condolences to the victims' families," Tantawi said in comments broadcast on state television. It did little to assuage the anger of fans, who, like many Egyptians, are furious that Egypt is still plagued by lawlessness and frequent bouts of deadly violence almost a year since Mubarak was driven out and replaced by an army council.