World Footballer
of the Year Lionel Messi found himself the unlikely figure of
controversy in Egypt after a local politician and a soccer official
reacted angrily when he donated a pair of his boots to raise money for
charity.MBC Masr channel
broadcast an interview last Saturday with Barcelona's Messi on the
television program 'Yes I am Famous', but the announcement that the
Argentina forward would auction his boots for charity provoked an
unexpected response.
Member of
parliament and television presenter Said Hasasin, appearing on his own
talk show, took off his shoes and said he would donate them to the poor
of Argentina.
"Whose shoes do you
want to sell, Messi? How much do you think it will get? You don't know
that the nail of a baby Egyptian is worth more than your shoes? Keep
your shoes to yourself or sell them to Israel."
"Messi, we Egyptians are 90 million people, who have pride, we have shoes."
"We
don't eat off the money of other peoples' shoes. I would have
understood if he donated his Barcelona uniform to the Egyptians, it's
accepted. But just the shoes? It's humiliating to all Egyptians and I do
not accept this humiliation. Egyptians may not find food, but they have
pride."
"We Egyptians have never been humiliated before during our seven thousand years of civilization."
Throwing shoes is considered an insult in the Middle East.
Hasasin called up Azmy Megahed, a spokesman for the Egyptian Football Association, on his program, who added:
"I am confused. If
he (Messi) intends to humiliate us, then I say he'd better put these
shoes on his head and on the heads of the people supporting him. We
don't need his shoes and we don't need charity from Jewish or Israeli
people. Give your shoes to your country, Argentina is full of poverty."
MBC
Masr's Mona El-Sharkawy who interviewed Messi said the gesture had been
misinterpreted and that the donation was not for an Egyptian charity.
"This
is so false. It's a trend on our show that we take a souvenir from our
guest and put it on auction for charity," El-Sharkawy was quoted as
saying by news agency Ahram.
"I am surprised, I
didn't say we will be giving it to charity in Egypt or any other place. I
don't know why they said he is presenting it to Egypt. This was never
said."
Messi has not commented on the reaction to his donation.
Former
Egypt forward Mido said he was grateful for Messi’s gesture, writing on
Twitter: "The most precious thing the writer owns is his pen ... and
the most precious thing the footballer owns is his shoes. I hope we stop
the false accusations.”
(Writing by Richard Martin in Barcelona,; additional reporting by Ola
Noureldin in Cairo; Editing by Ken Ferris and Gareth Jones)
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