The Phnom Penh Post

Russia nabs top football hooligan

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RUSSIAN special police on Saturday publicly detained the far-right football fan leader implicated in this summer’s Euro 2016 violence in France.

Moscow police said its criminal investigat­ion department hauled in the head of Russia’s national supporters associatio­n Alexander Shprygin for questionin­g and searched his home and office.

Police said that Shprygin was being questioned over a mass fight between football fans in central Moscow on January 31 this year. Russian media reported the fight was between fans of CSKA and Spartak Moscow.

Shprygin came to internatio­nal attention at Euro 2016 as the head of the officially accredited fan organisati­on after Russian hooligans shocked the world with ultraviole­nt clashes in the south of France.

France deported Shprygin along with other fans, only for him to sneak in again days later and get deported again.

Three other Russian fans – two of them members of Shprygin’s organisati­on, were sentenced to jail terms of up to two years over the violence that broke out in Marseille around the Russia-England match on June 11.

On Saturday morning, black-clad Russian specia l police swooped on Shpr ygin as he attempted to attend a meeting of the Russian Football Union (RFU) at a Moscow hotel.

Initially sympatheti­c

Sport Express news site posted witness videos showing a group of half a dozen special police, one wearing a balaclava, pull Shprygin from toilets and lead him away.

Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko, who was re-elected to a four-year term as RFU president on Saturday, told journalist­s the arrest was linked to Euro 2016 violence.

During Euro 2016, Shprygin’s links to far right groups came to light, as did footage of him accompanyi­ng President Vladimir Putin to visit a fan’s grave with other leaders of fan groups.

Russia was initially sympatheti­c to the fans, with Putin questionin­g how a few hundred Russian hooligans could have beaten several thousand England fans.

But Mutko later said that by flouting his deportatio­n order from France Shprygin had showed “disrespect” and was “letting down all of Russian football”.

The RFU on Saturday voted to expel Shprygin’s All-Russian Fan Associatio­n, which was created in 2007.

 ?? ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT/AFP ?? Russian far-right football fan leader Alexander Shprygin gets into a police van before leaving the Marseille holding centre to be expelled from France on June 18.
ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT/AFP Russian far-right football fan leader Alexander Shprygin gets into a police van before leaving the Marseille holding centre to be expelled from France on June 18.

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