Malta Independent

French referees keep right to halt games for abusive chants

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The French league insisted Wednesday that referees still have the right to stop matches in case of homophobic chanting, despite the national federation president urging them not to halt play.

Referees were told by French soccer federation president Noël Le Graët on Tuesday to ignore a FIFA directive and no longer stop matches when there is homophobic chanting. In response, anti-discrimina­tion groups urged Le Graët to resign. Several league games in France's top two divisions have been halted by referees this season.

Representa­tives of anti-discrimina­tion groups and French soccer fan groups met with the French league — or LFP — on Wednesday to discuss the matter ahead of the resumption of league matches this weekend.

LFP president Nathalie Boy de la Tour said soccer fans are not discrimina­tory in general but that the language some supporters use has no place.

"Football has a social responsibi­lity. Football has to assume its responsibi­lity," she said. "For a long time we have maybe tolerated chanting in the stadiums, but today society does not accept them anymore."

Pierre Barthélemy, lawyer for the National Supporters Associatio­n of soccer fans, said fans will work harder to improve the situation.

Among the anti-discrimina­tion groups attending was SOS Homophobia, whose co-president Jeremy Faledam welcomed the discussion­s.

The debate was sparked by Le Graët's comments in a radio interview on Tuesday.

France coach Didier Deschamps supported his president.

Sports minister Roxana Maracinean­u met with Le Graët at Tuesday's match. In a statement Wednesday, the FFF said Le Graët has pledged his "full commitment" to fighting "all forms of discrimina­tion."

The issue is proving divisive, with France players Antoine Griezmann and Hugo Lloris offering different opinions.

Griezmann, who has featured on LGBT magazine Têtu's front cover and has said he would openly welcome gay players, told RTL radio that referees should stop games "whether it's for homophobic chant or racist chants," because eventually "people will stop doing it." But Lloris, the France captain, thinks the opposite.

"As a player I'm against stopping matches. It's not the appropriat­e solution, whatever the form of discrimina­tion," Lloris said. "You have to fight against it, of course, but stopping matches isn't necessaril­y the right solution. It's not going to stop a minority of imbeciles from doing what they do inside a stadium. There are other solutions and we have to support the LFP, they will make the right decisions."

The high-profile first division match between Nice and Marseille on Aug. 28 was halted for several minutes during the first half after Nice fans unfurled three banners with homophobic messages. There was also chanting against the LFP with an anti-gay slur oft used by French fans.

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