BBC News with Marion Marshall
The Egyptian police have fired tear gas at demonstrators in the capital Cairo as public anger mounted over football violence. The demonstrators have accused the police of failing to assure security at a football match in Port Said on Wednesday. Seventy-four fans were killed when supporters of the home team clashed with those of a Cairo team. Rupert Wingfield-Hayes, in the Egyptian capital, says many people suspect the violence was
stirred up
by supporters of ex-President Mubarak.
They believe that in some shape or form, the military regime here was behind the violence. They believe, some of them, that the military wanted to take
revenge
against the football supporters who have been leaders in many of the protests against the military government over the last year. Others believe that the military regime simply wants to
destabilise
the situation in Egypt in order to cling on to power. I have to say there is absolutely no evidence so far at all to support these claims, but they are very, very widely believed.
The second in line to the British throne, Prince William, has arrived in the Falkland Islands for a six-week deployment with the Royal Air Force - a move Argentina has condemned as a
provocation
. Prince William will be part of a search and rescue helicopter team. His deployment comes after renewed arguments over the sovereignty of the Falklands, which Argentina claims as the Malvinas.