Kuwait Times

Putin takes fight to hooligans ahead of World Cup

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MOSCOW: Andrei and his fellow Russian football hooligans flew to France for the Euro 2016 tournament with only one goal in mind: to give England’s supporters a good kicking before the World Cup.

“It was like winning against Brazil in football,” Andrei told AFP of the orchestrat­ed violence. “It was our last chance to show ourselves before the World Cup because we knew Putin would crack down hard to make sure nothing like that happens in Russia,” he added, speaking on condition that his last name is withheld for his personal safety.

The headline-grabbing brawls in the southern French city of Marseille in June 2016 were bloody. The clashes on the streets of the touristy old port neighbourh­ood left 35 people-mainly England fans-injured, a handful of them seriously.

There were more ugly scenes when nearly 200 Russians rushed the English supporters’ section during their teams’ 1-1 draw at the Stade Velodrome. It was the worst violence to hit internatio­nal football since the 1998 World Cup, also held in France.

KINGS OF THUG WORLD

The Russians’ hatred for the English stemmed in part from their bitter 2010 battle for the right to host next year’s edition of the global competitio­n England’s high hopes were crushed by Russia.

The World Cup draw will be held in the State Kremlin Palace tomorrow and once the groups fall into place, there is nothing preventing the two nations from facing each other again on the pitch.

But the fighting was also driven by the Russians’ desire to take the crown of the world’s toughest thugs away from the English, traditiona­lly seen as the original football hooligans. “Those guys were kings in the 1990s before the police took action,” Andrei said.

“In Marseille, the English behaved very provocativ­ely, but they had become soft by that point. All the Russians came down to Marseille specifical­ly to show the English who we were.”—AFP

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