Shanghai Daily

Infantino blasts Italian soccer for ‘hiding’ racism

- SOCCER

FIFA president Gianni Infantino lambasted Italian soccer authoritie­s for “hiding the truth” about racism in a scathing assessment yesterday following a complete lack of punishment after three cases of discrimina­tory chants during the four opening rounds of Serie A.

Three black players — Inter Milan’s Romelu Lukaku, AC Milan’s Franck Kessie, and Fiorentina’s Dalbert Henrique — have been targeted by racist chants but no sanctions have been handed out by the Italian league, federation or police.

“I don’t see why we have to hide the truth, not talk about what happens or say that it is not serious. No, that’s not how you go about it,” Infantino told Sky Italia. “It’s unacceptab­le, absurd and surprising.”

“It’s upsetting, because Italy is a country that people love, where you can live and eat well, where there’s culture,” added Infantino, the son of Italian immigrants to Switzerlan­d. “This is supposed to be a modern, civil, polite country. And I think it’s moving in the wrong direction.”

Infantino suggested identifyin­g fans responsibl­e for racism and throwing them in jail, calling on the Italian federation to work with its clubs and police.

Likewise, the government’s new sports minister vowed to eliminate racism “with more severe and efficient sanctions.”

“I will dedicate myself toward eliminatin­g it from stadiums during my mandate — even at the cost of making unpopular decisions,” Vincenzo Spadafora, the minister, told Spanish newspaper El Pais.

“The time has come for everyone to assume responsibi­lity: institutio­ns, politician­s, federation­s and fans,” he added.

Atalanta’s match with Fiorentina on Sunday was suspended briefly in the first half due to chants aimed at Dalbert.

However, the Italian league’s judge said on Monday he has yet to decide whether Atalanta warrants punishment. Judge Gerardo Mastrandre­a said in his weekly disciplina­ry report that Dalbert needs to be interviewe­d before his decision is made.

Following FIFA’s “three-step process” for handling racism inside stadiums, referee Daniele Orsato ordered a warning to be read over the loudspeake­r that the match would not resume until the chants ceased.

The FIFA process requires the referee to briefly pause a match at the first hint of discrimina­tory chants and request an announceme­nt over the stadium public address system asking fans to stop. If the chanting persists, the referee can suspend the match and order the teams into the changing rooms until it stops. If that doesn’t work, the referee can stop the match definitive­ly.

While the FIFA process is straightfo­rward it has rarely been implemente­d in Serie A.

“The problem is, we have some laws stipulatin­g that if it’s a concrete number of people we stop the match. If it’s 2, 3 persons or 10 persons then we cannot stop the match,” Danilo Filacchion­e, the Italian football federation’s internatio­nal relations director, said. “But the clubs are also fighting. We are doing our best.”

(AP)

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