European soccer's governing body warned the English and Russian soccer associations on Sunday their teams could be disqualified from Euro 2016 if there was more of the fan violence that has injured several dozen people.
Masked Russian fans charged at England
supporters, punching and kicking them. Some England fans had to scramble
over barriers to escape.
UEFA said it would also investigate allegations of racist behaviour and the throwing of missiles and fireworks.
The
violence in the stadium followed three days of clashes between English,
Russian and French fans in the Mediterranean port city of Marseille
that drew a strong response from riot police.
UEFA said it was "disgusted" and would not hesitate to impose sanctions, including "the potential disqualification of their respective teams from the tournament, should such violence occur again". It said a decision on sanctions against Russia would be made on Tuesday.
ALCOHOL BAN?
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve called the fans' behaviour barbaric and said it was "absolutely necessary that national federations whose supporters create incidents of this nature be penalised".
A ministry spokesman said Cazeneuve was not calling for Russia and England to be punished, but rather supporting UEFA's stance.
The
minister also said he had asked the cities hosting Euro 2016 fixtures
to ban the sale and consumption of alcohol in zones where the risk of
confrontation was most acute.
English and Russian
fans will almost certainly cross paths in northern France later this
week, with Russia playing Slovakia in Lille on Wednesday and England
facing Wales only 40 km (25 miles) away in Lens on Thursday.
Russian
Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko, who had initially denied there had been
any crowd disturbance, said UEFA was right to investigate.
It
is the second time in as many European Championship tournaments that
the Russian federation has faced sanctions because of its fans.
Russia
was fined and given a suspended six-point deduction for its Euro 2016
qualifying campaign after fans assaulted stadium security staff and
displayed illicit banners at the 2012 tournament in Poland and Ukraine.
The British government urged calm on all sides and offered to send more police to France ahead of England's next game.
Violence
also briefly erupted in Nice, where Northern Irish and local fans
hurled glass bottles and chairs at each other late on Saturday.
Police said they had arrested 15 people after scuffles ahead of Sunday's game between Turkey and Croatia in Paris.
The French government rallied behind the police amid questions over tactics and security inside the stadiums.
"SOCCER IS SICK"
"If there is a failure, it is that of soccer, which is sick because some of its fans drink excessively and fight," Interior Ministry spokesman Pierre-Henri Brandet said on BFM-TV.
A UEFA spokesman said more security personnel would be deployed to segregate rival fans inside stadiums.
The
tournament is being played under a state of emergency after Islamist
militants attacked Paris in November, killing 130 people.
Further
questions over security were raised when flares and a smoke bomb were
let off at the Parc des Princes in Paris during Turkey's match against
Croatia on Sunday. UEFA said it would not comment before it received the
referee's match report.
In Marseille, some
English fans suggested French riot police had been heavy-handed and
quick to fire tear gas. Thirty-five people were hurt in the fighting,
including one English fan who suffered a heart attack.
Marseille police chief Laurent Nunez told France Info radio his force's response prevented "much more serious damage". Fifteen people, mostly English, were arrested in the city over three days.
In
2000 UEFA threatened to kick England out of the tournament after
violence broke out between English and German fans in the Belgian cities
of Brussels and Charleroi.
France has enlisted
more than 90,000 police, soldiers and private security agents nationwide
to ensure safety in the face of intelligence agency warnings of
potential militant attacks and the threat of hooliganism.
No comments :
Post a Comment