Arab News

Germany set for massive security challenge at Euro 2024

- AFP Neuss, Germany

Keeping fans and players safe will be a mammoth task for Germany as it hosts Euro 2024 this summer in a tense global climate with major conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East. From hooligans to potential terrorist attacks and even cyberattac­ks, the European Championsh­ip organizers will be looking to ward off a range of threats.

Security forces will be charged with protecting some 2.7 million fans, 24 team base camps spread across the country and 10 stadiums where 51 matches will be played between June 14 and July 14.

Designated fan zones are also expected to attract around 12 million visitors.

“From the outset, security has been our top priority,” tournament director

Lahm told AFP.

In an unpreceden­ted move, Germany has invited some 300 security experts from all nations playing in the tournament to take part in a monitoring project at the Internatio­nal Police Cooperatio­n Center (IPCC) in the western city of Neuss. Alongside officials from Germany, Europol and European football body UEFA, they will take turns to monitor the situation on the ground, gathering during the tournament in a huge 500-squaremete­r (5,382-square-foot) conference room equipped with 129 computers and a

Philipp

40-square-meter screen, AFP saw on a visit to the facility. “Each country knows its troublemak­ers better than any other, and the foreign experts present in Neuss will be able to identify them more quickly,” Oliver Strudthoff, director of the IPCC, told AFP. “The size of the delegation­s will depend on the number of fans and how potentiall­y dangerous they are. England, for example, will have many more representa­tives than Switzerlan­d,” he said.

At the matches themselves, all hands will be on deck — police have been forbidden from taking leave during the tournament. Germany will also introduce security controls on all of its nine borders.

“On trains and in stations, the federal police will be visibly stepping up their presence,” said a spokesman for the German interior ministry. The same applies to airports.

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