Kuwait Times

Italian city gets football hooligans cleaning to end violence

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LONDON: Amid concerns over violence at the World Cup in Russia, one Italian city claims to have found the answer to football hooliganis­m - make rowdy fans swap brass knuckles for brooms. For more than two decades, supporters of Genoa’s two rival teams Sampdoria and Genoa - have joined forces to clean their stadium in a scheme city officials credit with helping to end years of violence.

“(The) heated confrontat­ions we had for a period of time ... abated significan­tly,” Stefano Anzalone, councillor for sport in the city, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. After street violence led to dozens of injuries and arrests in Genoa, in the early 1990s authoritie­s offered hard-core fans known as “ultras” the chance to launch a company to tackle the problem. Genova Insieme, a social enterprise, was officially launched in 1992, tasked with employing rival hooligans to clean the Luigi Ferraris stadium where both Genoa and Sampdoria play. Social enterprise­s are businesses with a mission to benefit society or the environmen­t.

In Italy the number of social cooperativ­es, a type of social enterprise that get tax cuts in return for providing social services, rose 43 percent to more than 16,000 between 2011 and 2015, according to the national statistics bureau ISTAT.

Toiling shoulder by shoulder helped to ease tensions and gave disadvanta­ged youths a fresh start, said Roberto Scotto, the 58-year-old Genoa fan who has run the company since 1994. “Problems arise when young people hang out with little to do. Those who have a job and something to lose don’t get into trouble,” said Scotto. “None of those who worked with us has since had any stadium-related issue.”

Scotto said the model could help other countries tackle football hooliganis­m, which is a concern for the organisers of the World Cup that kicks off on June 14. Some media have predicted a possible repeat of the brawls between Russian and English fans at the 2016 European championsh­ip in France although Russia has vowed to crack down on crowd unrest. yesterday, British authoritie­s said they blocked more than 1,200 people with a history of football-related disorders from travelling to the World Cup. Europe’s football governing body, UEFA, has said it welcomed initiative­s “in the framework of peer control” that contribute­d to a friendly atmosphere in and around stadiums. Scotto, however, said policing remains the strongest deterrent against violence at large events like the World Cup, where visiting fans are loosely organised and have no ties to the local community.

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