Malta Independent

Former Chelsea player Smertin lands Russian racism role

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Former Chelsea midfielder Alexei Smertin has been put in charge of investigat­ing soccer racism in Russia, despite previously appearing to deny it existed.

Smertin said his new role as the Russian Football Union’s anti-racism and discrimina­tion inspector means he will “put every effort into keeping racism and discrimina­tion out of the story of football in my country.”

“Ahead of the 2017 Confederat­ions Cup and 2018 World Cup, Russia, as a country hosting such big internatio­nal tournament­s, should be an example of global tolerance both on and off the football field,” Smertin said Tuesday in a statement on the RFU website. “And we will definitely show that.”

The former Russia internatio­nal, who is also an ambassador for the World Cup, was criticized in 2015 for comments made to the BBC, when he played down the significan­ce of racism in Russian soccer.

“There’s no racism in Russia, definitely, because you know it does not exist,” he told the British broadcaste­r. “It’s just like a fashion. It comes from abroad, from different countries.”

Smertin told the BBC some Russian fans had taunted black players with bananas “just for fun” and that racist chants were meant by Russian fans to distract black players on the opposing side, rather than as personal abuse.

Smertin’s new job is a highprofil­e role ahead of next year’s World Cup, which is under scrutiny over violence involving Russian fans at last year’s European Championsh­ip and a rise in the number of racist incidents at domestic games.

Campaign group FARE reported 92 incidents of discrimina­tory displays and chants by Russian fans in and around stadiums during the 2014-15 season, the last for which figures are available. FARE said there were 83 incidents in the previous two seasons combined.

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