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Petrol panic eases in Egypt

Fuel distribution improved in Egypt on Thursday after panicked motorists flooded gas stations, prompting the death of one person and several hurt.
19.01.12 | Source: Zawya

Fuel distribution improved in Egypt on Thursday after panicked motorists flooded gas stations for days, prompting the death of one person and scuffles that left several people hurt.

Queues receded at many Cairo stations, which have been short on petrol and diesel since Sunday, an AFP correspondent said.

Media outlets reported improvements since Wednesday, after the authorities moved to reassure the public in a bid to normalise the situation.

There was a "limited improvement in the domestic petrol and gas crisis in Cairo, but the problem continues in the provinces," read the headlines of the government-owned newspaper Al-Akhbar.

The daily said that cheaper, lower-octane petrol was nowhere to be found in certain areas, such as the province of Qaliubiya, north of Cairo.

The independent newspaper Al-Masri Al-Yom reported seven people were injured in clashes in front of petrol stations in Daqahliya, another province in the the Nile Delta.

Al-Shuruq newspaper, meanwhile, said one person was shot dead in Helwan, south of Cairo, in a gunfight between a station's staff and taxi drivers.

Oil sector workers confirmed a resumption of distribution, stressing they were irregular and varied by region and fuel type.

The rush for fuel was sparked by a fear of inflated prices, which have been kept very low thanks to subsidies that severely weigh down the Egyptian budget.

The government blamed unfounded "rumours" of structural shortages and mounting prices, accusing speculators of provoking the crisis by reselling fuel on the black market.

Officials have also linked the crisis to smugglers who reportedly buy up the subsidised petrol to sell abroad.

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