Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

HIGHLANDER­S CONDEMN HOOLIGANIS­M

- Ricky Zililo

HIGHLANDER­S have again condemned acts of hooliganis­m at their matches and expressed concerns at what they called people masqueradi­ng as club supporters to dent Bosso’s image.

Speaking at a press conference held at the club’s offices yesterday following Sunday’s disturbanc­es that led to police releasing tear gas at Mandava Stadium, acting chairman Modern Ngwenya said his club strongly condemns any form of violence.

He also blamed the police for failing to manage the few people responsibl­e for throwing missiles onto the pitch and questioned if any arrests had been made at Mandava Stadium.

“As Highlander­s FC, we follow the statutes and laws of football in the country. We follow the Fifa and Zifa statutes. We are subordinat­e to those bodies. We discourage any form of hooliganis­m or any act of violence. As a big club, we endeavour at all times to be a role model to other clubs that came after us,” said Ngwenya.

“The game at Mandava was about to end, just some seconds before the final whistle, and skirmishes that were happening outside were dealt with inside the stadium. Instead of dealing with the perpetrato­rs outside the stadium they (police) decided to throw tear gas onto the stand which had been cleared. The game was about to start and the police overreacte­d by throwing teargas onto the field of play.

“We’ve had skirmishes before at Mandava Stadium, but never before have we had such overreacti­on from police throwing tear gas onto the field of play. I think there are some better methods of dealing with crowd trouble than that,” Ngwenya said.

The police fired tear smoke at the fans deep into the referee’s optional time causing the abandonmen­t of the match with the two teams deadlocked one-all.

All hell broke loose after the home side equalised from a penalty converted by goalkeeper Petros Mhari triggering some Bosso fans to throw plastic bottles onto the pitch forcing second assistant referee Evans Chabataber­i to abandon the touch line for the centre circle.

In the ensuing melee, police unleashed volleys of tear smoke into the crowd triggering a stampede as Bosso fans after police threw tear gas onto the field of play that had players and officials inside. I think that basic evacuation process demands that fans, players and referees are safe first before you use tear gas.

“I feel there was some heavy handedness on the part of the police. They should have dealt with the crowd outside, not inside the pitch where there were players. Instead of protecting players, they endangered them. When it comes to what happened at Mandava, we are very disappoint­ed as the Highlander­s family” said Ngwenya.

He said the club’s argument on dealing with hooliganis­m is not a blame game, adding that a collective effort is needed to fish out people masqueradi­ng as soccer supporters, while their intentions are to tarnish the image of the game.

Ngwenya also took a swipe at people abusing the Highlander­s’ brand by causing skirmishes.

“I just want to take this opportunit­y to appeal to our supporters, those that love football and those that are bent on soiling our name as Highlander­s to desist from acts of violence or hooliganis­m because it’s affecting us as a club. We are a club that respects the statutes of the game and it should remain that way.

“We want to encourage all football lovers to respect the referees’ decisions whether right or wrong,” Ngwenya said. — @ZililoR.

See Comment on Page 4

 ??  ?? Fans are all over the pitch after the police fired teargas during the FC Platinum-Highlander­s match at Mandava Stadium in Zvishavane on Sunday. Inset: Modern Ngwenya
Fans are all over the pitch after the police fired teargas during the FC Platinum-Highlander­s match at Mandava Stadium in Zvishavane on Sunday. Inset: Modern Ngwenya

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