Family member of a victim of the Port Said massacre reacts outside the
Court of Cassation following the court’s ruling in the case in Cairo.
An Egyptian court upheld Monday death sentences against 10 people
convicted over rioting that claimed 74 lives at a stadium in Port Said
in 2012, judicial and security officials said.
The ruling by the Court of Cassation, which is final, excluded an
11th defendant who remains at large after his death penalty was also
confirmed in June 2015 by another court.
The court upheld prison sentences for around 40 other people,
including a five-year term against Port Said’s security chief at the
time, a judicial official said.Monday’s ruling was welcomed by relatives of those who died in the rioting, who celebrated outside the court in Cairo.
The riot, the country’s deadliest sports-related violence, broke out
when fans of home team Al-Masry and Cairo’s Al-Ahly clashed after a
premier league match between the two clubs.
Ultras — hardcore football supporters usually blamed by the
authorities for violence — were at the forefront of the 2011 uprising
that unseated longtime president Hosni Mubarak.-AFP

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