Riots in Belgium, Netherlands after Morocco win at World Cup - Los Angeles Times
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Riots in Belgium, Netherlands after Morocco win at World Cup

Police cars drive through a debris covered boulevard in Brussels
Police cars drive through a main boulevard in Brussels as violence broke out during and after Morocco’s 2-0 win over Belgium at the World Cup.
(Geert Vanden Wijngaert / Associated Press)
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Riots broke out in several Belgian and Dutch cities after Morocco’s 2-0 upset win over Belgium at the World Cup on Sunday.

Police detained about a dozen people after they deployed water cannons and fired tear gas to disperse crowds in Brussels and eight more in the northern city of Antwerp. Two police officials were injured in the Dutch port city of Rotterdam. By late evening Sunday, an uneasy calm had returned to most of the cities involved.

Dozens of rioters overturned and torched cars, set electric scooters on fire and pelted cars with bricks. Police moved in after one person suffered facial injuries, said Brussels police spokeswoman Ilse Van de Keere.

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Brussels Mayor Philippe Close urged people to stay away from the city center and said authorities were doing their utmost to keep order in the streets. Even subway and tram traffic had to be interrupted on police orders.

“Those are not fans, they are rioters. Moroccan fans are there to celebrate,†Close said. There were also disturbances in the city of Antwerp and Liege.

U.S. Soccer briefly protested Iran’s treatment of women by removing the Islamic Republic emblem from the country’s flag on social media posts.

“Sad to see how a few individuals abuse a situation to run amok,†said Interior Minister Annelies Verlinden.

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Police in the neighboring Netherlands said violence erupted in the port city of Rotterdam, with riot officers attempting to break up a group of 500 soccer supporters who pelted police with fireworks and glass. Media reported unrest in the capital Amsterdam and The Hague.

Morocco’s victory was a major upset at the World Cup and was enthusiastically celebrated by fans with Moroccan immigrant roots in many Belgian and Dutch cities.

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