Kuwait Times

FIFA adds voice to sporting protests over Floyd’s death

Protesting players deserved praise not punishment: Infantino

-

BERN: World soccer’s governing body FIFA has joined sports leagues, teams and players around the globe to express solidarity amid outrage over the death of George Floyd, an unarmed black man killed in police custody in the United States.

The National Football League, National Hockey League and National Basketball Associatio­n have put out statements about the racial injustice that sparked protests across the U.S. but Major League Baseball has yet to make an official statement.

From those four leagues, 74 of 123 teams (60%) have issued statements on the protests according to research by Axios.

Only four of the NBA’s 30 teams have not issued releases while fewer than half (15) of the NFL’s 32 teams and just a third (10) of MLB’s 30 clubs made statements.

Across those leagues the loudest support has come from the players, including Los Angeles Lakers’ Lebron James, New Jersey Devils defenseman PK Subban, Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl-winning quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes and New York Yankees slugger Gincarlo Stanton.

Charlotte Hornets and owner and former NBA great Michael Jordan and golfer Tiger Woods, who rarely speak out on social issues, have also called for change.

The voices of outrage, however, are being heard well beyond U.S. borders. Several soccer players protested during matches in Germany’s top-flight Bundesliga at the weekend, with Borussia Dortmund’s Jadon Sancho and Achraf Hakimi displaying undershirt­s with the message, “Justice for George Floyd” on Sunday.

The German Football Associatio­n (DFB) said it was reviewing the incidents. England internatio­nal Sancho was shown a yellow card after removing his shirt but the DFB said it was not due to his message but because he broke the rules on removing shirts.

FIFA, an organisati­on that has had zero tolerance for players expressing personal views about politics, religion and social issues on the field, has asked competitio­n organisers to use “common sense” with athletes who show messages of protest over Floyd’s death.

In a statement on Tuesday, the global soccer body said it “fully understand­s the depth of sentiment and concerns expressed by many footballer­s in light of the tragic circumstan­ces of the George Floyd case”. It added that applying the laws of the game was the responsibi­lity of competitio­n organisers, such as domestic leagues, who FIFA said “should use common sense and have in considerat­ion the context surroundin­g the events.

“FIFA had repeatedly expressed itself to be resolutely against racism and discrimina­tion of any kind... FIFA itself has promoted many anti-racism campaigns which frequently carry the anti-racism message at matches organised under its own auspices,” it added. FIFA President Gianni Infantino later added that the protesting players deserved praise not punishment. “For the avoidance of doubt, in a FIFA competitio­n the recent demonstrat­ions of players in Bundesliga matches would deserve an applause and not a punishment,” he said. “We all must say no to racism and any form of discrimina­tion. We all must say no to violence. Any form of violence.”

Former West Indies captain Daren Sammy has urged cricket’s world governing body, the Internatio­nal Cricket Council, and its member nations to speak out against social injustice.

“@ICC and all the other boards are you guys not seeing what’s happening to ppl like me? Are you not gonna speak against the social injustice against my kind...” he wrote in a series of tweets.

“Now is not the time to be silent. I wanna hear u,” the St Lucia all-rounder, who led West Indies to Twenty20 World Cup titles in 2012 and 2016, said.

His former team mate Chris Gayle also posted a statement on social media saying “Black life matters just as any other life!”

Formula One drivers followed Lewis Hamilton’s lead on Monday after he criticised those in what he called the “white dominated sport” for failing to speak out about Floyd’s death.

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc said on Twitter he had felt “out of place and uncomforta­ble” sharing his thoughts on social media about the situation but realised he had been “completely wrong”.

 ??  ??
 ?? — AFP ?? MINNEAPOLI­S: Former NBA player Stephen Jackson arrives at a protest in response to the police killing of George Floyd outside the Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota. Jackson, who was friends with George Floyd, spoke at a press conference before joining the protest.
— AFP MINNEAPOLI­S: Former NBA player Stephen Jackson arrives at a protest in response to the police killing of George Floyd outside the Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota. Jackson, who was friends with George Floyd, spoke at a press conference before joining the protest.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait