Irish Independent

People’s game must confront racist far-right’s flypast move

- MIGUEL DELANEY

THE plane incident at Manchester City-Burnley last night should not be ignored, or dismissed as giving oxygen to the ignorant. It should be placed in its correct context, and fully condemned. This is genuinely a landmark political moment for the game.

Stand back and consider it. A far-right statement was flown over a Premier League football stadium. This, frankly, is shocking.

The fact Burnley were so admirably quick in condemning it only emphasises that.

It genuinely isn’t too far removed from Lazio ultras printing stickers of Anne Frank. In that regard, it’s impossible not to wonder what the discussion would be if supporters from Italy, Bulgaria or Hungary

– or any other country that has recently seen racist incidents in football – had been responsibl­e.

There would be a lot of questions about the cultures. That should apply here. This is English football 2020.

It obviously isn’t all of English football 2020, but it’s there, and seemingly growing. You can sense it in the greater reporting of racist abuse in stands over the last two years, and the uncomforta­ble fact that so many football supporters were linked to the riots in London last weekend, where the “White Lives Matter” message of course featured prominentl­y.

Many at the time bristled at how the game was so willingly brought into that, blamed for it. But it is something the sport must confront.

Football is famously the people’s game, more universal and popular than any other sport. It will thereby cover more of the people’s views than any other, and – as the current political climate shows – many of those views are problemati­c.

That makes the sport’s impressive embrace of the BLM movement all the more important, and even more crucial going forward.

For the avoidance of any doubt, the BLM message is a specific response to the systematic and institutio­nal historic victimisat­ion that the black community has had to suffer, so distilled by the death of George Floyd. Any response to that along the lines of “White Lives Matter” is a fundamenta­l rejection of the message, which is what makes it far-right – and fundamenta­lly racist. This is an element within the game that cannot be ignored, and must be confronted.

It is a shocking moment, that only proves the necessity of embracing “Black Lives Matter”

That is the view of Piara Power of Fare – the football antidiscri­mination network – in a statement.

“The ‘White Lives Matter’ flypast is part of Europe’s wider ‘racist backlash’,” Power said. “Set against the BLM message of equal rights ‘White Lives Matter’ can only be motivated by racism and a denial of equal rights.”

The details of how this flyover happened, and who was responsibl­e, will doubtless come out over the next few days.

The significan­ce of it, however, cannot be clearer.

It is a shocking moment for the game, that only proves the necessity of football embracing “Black Lives Matter”. (© Independen­t News Service)

 ??  ?? Riyad Mahrez scores Manchester City’s second goal against Burnley last night
Riyad Mahrez scores Manchester City’s second goal against Burnley last night
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