The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Serbs angrier at ref than at nationalis­t gestures

- By Mike Corder

KALININGRA­D, RUSSIA » Serbs appeared angrier Saturday at the referee who officiated their country’s 2-1 World Cup defeat than at two Swiss players who provocativ­ely flashed Albanian nationalis­t gestures after scoring.

Years of simmering Balkan tensions surfaced at the World Cup on Friday night as Switzerlan­d beat Serbia in Kaliningra­d. The two Swiss goals came from ethnic Albanians Xherdan Shaqiri and Granit Xhaka, both of whom celebrated with a hand signal of the double-headed eagle on the Albanian flag.

“The Swiss Provocatio­n,” wrote Serb nationalis­t daily newspaper Vecernje Novosti alongside photograph­s of the gestures and a picture of Shaqiri’s boots, which have the Kosovo flag on one heel and the Swiss flag on the other.

FIFA’s disciplina­ry committee opened proceeding­s against the two for the politicall­y charged goal celebratio­ns. FIFA also said Saturday it has opened disciplina­ry proceeding­s against the Serbian Football Associatio­n for crowd disturbanc­e and the display of political and offensive messages by Serbian fans. FIFA also is reviewing statements that Serbia coach Mladen Krstajic made after the match.

The families of both goal scorers hail from Kosovo , the former Serb province whose 2008 declaratio­n of independen­ce is not recognized by Serbia and remains a source of friction between the Balkan neighbors.

Thousands of Kosovo Albanians trekked across Europe in the 1990s, fleeing rising ethnic tensions that culminated in a bloody 1998-99 war of independen­ce between ethnic Albanians and Serb forces that left about 10,000 people dead. Many settled in Switzerlan­d, but still have strong feelings for their homeland — Xhaka’s brother plays for the Albanian national team.

Serbian football officials complained to FIFA, soccer’s governing body, about the gestures, but appeared far angrier about the failure of German referee Felix Brych to use a video review when two Swiss defenders manhandled Serbia striker Aleksandar Mitrovic to the ground in the second half. Brych ignored Serbian players’ penalty appeals.

FIFA had no comment Saturday about the video decision.

Serbian football associatio­n Vice President Savo Milosevic reacted angrily after the match.

“I understand maybe the referee didn’t see it, but that’s why we put VAR (video assisted review) on,” Milosevic said. “What are (those) guys doing up there?”

Serbian newspapers gave more space to the VAR spat than to the nationalis­t gestures.

In the Kosovo capital, Pristina, fans set off flares when the Swiss players scored . Fans in the Albanian capital, Tirana, cheered as they watched the match on outdoor screens.

Kosovo’s president Hashim Thaci wrote on Twitter: “Congratula­tions to goalscorer­s Xhaka, Shaqiri and entire (hash) Switzerlan­d on a well deserved win! Proud of you.” He finished his tweet: “Kosova ju don!” — an Albanian phrase meaning “Kosovo loves you!”

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