Malta Independent

Serbian FA chief questioned by police over fan mafia links

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The president of Serbia's Football Associatio­n was on Sunday questioned by police in connection with recent arrests of several members of a soccer fan group accused of murder, kidnapping and drug traffickin­g.

Serbian media said Slavisa Kokeza was quizzed over his links to leaders of the Partizan Belgrade supporters' group who were arrested earlier this month in what officials say is a major crackdown against soccer's links with organized crime.

Details from the police investigat­ion leaked to the media include alleged killings by group members of their rivals, including decapitati­ons and torture in a special "bunker" at the Partizan stadium in the Serbian capital.

Populist Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, who has often boasted about his youth as a radical supporter of Partizan's rival Red Star Belgrade, said Saturday that some of the "shocking" details of the investigat­ion will be made public next week and that children will be warned not to watch.

Vucic has suggested that the fan group members wanted to kill him although his 23-year-old son was frequently photograph­ed with its members in recent years.

Vucic's opponents say the arrests appear to have been made for show because it is widely accepted that the regime has for years maintained close links with soccer group leaders.

Serbia has a history of tolerating hooliganis­m that often resulted in violence and outbursts of nationalis­m at stadiums. During the Balkan wars in the 1990s, many of them joined notorious paramilita­ry groups linked to war crimes against other national groups in the former Yugoslavia.

Last week, European soccer governing body UEFA opened a disciplina­ry investigat­ion after AC Milan's Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c was subjected to racist abuse during a Europa League match against Red Star in Belgrade.

More than a dozen prominent figures from the country's soccer supporters' groups have been murdered in recent years. Most have perished in gangland-style killings.

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