Malta Independent

FIFA president: Racism in Italian stadiums ‘very serious’

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FIFA president Gianni Infantino labelled the situation of racism inside Italian soccer stadiums “very serious” following the latest incident of offensive chants.

A 2-2 draw between Atalanta and Fiorentina on Sunday was suspended briefly during the first half due to racist chants.

The referee ordered a warning to be read over the stadium’s loudspeake­r after the chants were apparently made by Atalanta fans toward Fiorentina fullback Dalbert Henrique, a Brazilian player who is black.

Toward the half-hour mark, Dalbert stopped and glared at the direction where the chants appeared to come from, and he then spoke to the referee.

The address over the loudspeake­r, warning that the match would not resume until the chants stopped, was met with whistles from the crowd.

Once the crowd calmed down, the match resumed after a break of several minutes.

Inter Milan’s Romelu Lukaku and AC Milan’s Franck Kessie have also been targeted this season but no club has been punished by the league judge.

“Racism is combatted with education, condemnati­on and discussion,” Infantino, head of world soccer’s governing body FIFA, said on Italian state TV RAI. “You can’t have racism in society or in football. In Italy the situation has not improved and this is very serious. You need to identify those responsibl­e and throw them out of the stadiums. You need, as in England, the certainty of the penalty. You can’t be afraid to condemn racists, we need to combat them until they stop.”

Atalanta fans have been accused of racism before.

Last year, Borussia Dortmund striker Michy Batshuayi questioned if UEFA cared about tackling racism after European soccer’s governing body rejected his complaint that the Bergamo club’s fans subjected him to abuse during a Europa League game in Italy.

Coaches of both clubs Sunday vehemently insisted that they didn’t hear any offensive chants.

“I really didn’t hear these chants. I didn’t ask (Dalbert) anything either,” Fiorentina coach Vincenzo Montella said. “I didn’t hear, to be honest, no.”

Montella was then asked if he condemned the incident.

“Come on, just because two people say something . ... In every game I am on the receiving end of these things because I am from Naples,” Montella said, referring to territoria­l chants, which are also a problem in Italy. “What should I do? My answer is to always thank them for reminding me (that I am from Naples). What should I do?”

Atalanta coach Gian Piero Gasperini added, “I didn’t hear any chant, at least from where we were nobody heard anything. I even asked (Vincenzo) Montella if (he had heard something). Then, if a couple of idiots who were on the other side (of the stadium) said something to Dalbert, OK. But then again do you know how many and serious insults from individual­s there are in all the stadiums, Florence included, when you play there? I don’t think they were chants . ... chants are something else.

“We have to be careful with these things, because obviously we have to absolutely condemn any form of racism, but we can’t start checking if some individual insults. They were not chants. We didn’t hear any chant,” Gasperini said. “Let’s avoid doing things like this because instead of having a positive effect, which would be right when there are actual chants, we have an exaggerati­on and I think this was the case today.”

Atalanta, which is based in Bergamo, is playing in Parma while its stadium is being renovated.

Atalanta ‘disassocia­tes’ itself from fans’ racist chants

Atalanta has issued a statement “disassocia­ting” itself from racist chants by its fans, while several prominent figures in Italy yesterday applauded a decision to halt the club’s Serie A game because of the abuse.

Atalanta said: “Concerning the suspension of the AtalantaFi­orentina match, the club disassocia­tes itself from any type of discrimina­tion that might have occurred. Atalanta, along with its supporters and fans, is and will always be a mouthpiece for the values of solidarity and equality. The stupidity of a few needs to be combatted together and we believe that it has neither colours nor jerseys. It needs to be isolated.”

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