European football wrestles with racism
PARIS: The interruption of the Dijon-Amiens Ligue 1 match on Friday after visiting captain Prince Gouano was the target of monkey chants adds to a string of recent racist incidents across Europe.
It comes after rising Italy star Moise Kean was targeted by racist abuse in Cagliari in Serie A earlier in the month.
Monkey chants were aimed at England players during a Euro 2020 qualifier in Montenegro and there have been a series of episodes involving London clubs.
"Racism exists in the stadiums in France, but we cannot put the situation on the same level as in Eastern European countries or Italy," football sociologist Nicolas Hourcade, a professor at the Central School of Lyon, told AFP.
The goalless draw in Dijon was halted in the 78th minute as players from both sides stopped playing and headed towards the touchline after Gouano said he heard insults.
"It’s over," Gouano said. "We’re not playing on. I’m taking off my team-mates."
Players, including Gouano went to remonstrate with fans.
Referee Karim Abed also asked the stadium announcer to "get the message across, if it happens again, we stop."
Following discussions between players, coaches and officials, play then resumed.
"In Dijon, we saw that it was an isolated supporter who could be identified and arrested," Hourcade said. "In other countries, there are collective demonstrations where a whole section of the ground, or a good part of one, can shout monkey chants or racist slogans."
After the game, the French league (LFP) said it would investigate and also announced that Dijon had identified the culprit. The club said they intended to press charges.
Anti-racism campaigners urge abandoning matches.
"We do not tackle the subject of racism as we should," former France captain Lilian Thuram told AFP in 2018, after Blaise Matuidi suffered abuse when Juventus played at Cagliari.
"Why didn’t the referee stop the match, why didn’t the white players leave the field?"
The same thing happened when Juventus played at Cagliari on April 2. Kean, along with Matuidi and Brazilian Alex Sandro, were targeted by monkey noises and jeers throughout the match.
Instead of denouncing their fans, Cagliari’s leadership blamed Kean for celebrating his late winner by standing motionless and silent with arms spread in front of the hostile stand. In England too, there have been numerous recent incidents at all levels of football.
-
Jonathan Quick, The New York Rangers Face Mounting Pressure As Losses Pile Up -
Timothée Chalamet, Kylie Jenner Are Living Together In LA: Source -
Johnny Knoxville Net Worth: How The Actor Built A $50mn Fortune -
Meghan Markle Hidden Agenda Behind Returning To UK Exposed -
Raptors Vs Pacers: Toronto Shorthanded With Key Players Ruled Out Due To Injuries -
Iran Flight Radar Update: Airspace Closure Extended Amid Heightened Tensions -
Toronto Snow Day: What To Expect After Environment Canada's Snow Storm Warning -
Astrologer Gives Their Verdict On ‘Rat’ Prince Harry’s New Year -
Céline Dion Honours Late Husband René Angélil On 10th Anniversary Of His Death -
Meghan Markle Seeks 'special Treatment' Ahead Of Possible UK Return: Report -
EBay Launches First Climate Transition Plan, Targets 'zero Emissions' By 2045 -
Rihanna To Announce Music Comeback And UK Stadium Shows -
Tish Cyrus Calls Post-divorce Period 'roughest' Time Of Her Life -
Prince Harry Turns To Hands-on Fatherhood As ‘crippling Social Anxiety’ Get Choke Hold -
Pete Davidson Launches New Talk Show From His Garage -
US To Suspend Immigrant Visa Processing For 75 Countries: Know All Details