Egypt's military has intervened in the coastal city of Port Said following violent clashes between thousands of protesters and police, which left at least one dead and hundreds injured.
A police official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case, said the transfer was necessary to ensure calm before a March 9 court hearing that is expected to issue new verdicts for police officers and other Port Said defendants also charged in connection with the soccer incident.
In Cairo, die-hard soccer fans of Al-Ahly club, known as the Ultras, are also gearing up for the March 9 verdict. They staged protests around the capital on Sunday that blocked traffic going to the airport, and closed off an area around the central bank.
Most of those killed in the Port Said stadium were Al-Ahly Ultras fans.
Al Jazeera's Mohamed Fawzy, reporting from Cairo, said two cars were burned down in front of the Egyptian Museum near Tahrir Square. Fawzy also reported scattered clashes between police forces trying to open Tahrir Square, and protesters insisting on closing it.
By nightfall, a handful of protesters and riot police continued to clash along a major street near the square, according to the Associated Press.
PHOTO CAPTION
Egyptian security forces stand guard as they face protesters (not pictured), during clashes in Port Said, Egypt, about 200 kms of East of Cairo, Egypt, 02 March 2013.
Aljazeera