Deutsche Welle (English edition)

German football club St. Pauli question their presence on UK police terror list

German second division club St. Pauli have asked police why they have appeared alongside jihadi and far-right groups on a UK counterter­rorism guide. The club are renowned for their activism and their fans are baffled.

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The skull and crossbones emblem belonging to St. Pauli is a much more common sight around the world than you'd expect of a club that has spent most of its recent history in Germany's lower leagues.

The reason for that lies largely in the club's social and political activism. The Hamburg-based outfit are renowned for having a left-leaning, anti-fascist following and have expressed support for the plight of Kurds in the Middle East, held banners welcoming refugees, and been involved with confrontat­ions with neo-Nazis and hooligans at away games on a number of occasions. Such stances have won them a cult following and a number of engaged internatio­nal fan groups who often run projects to support refugees and others struggling in their local areas.

Several of those groups are in the UK, where football's fan culture has broadly moved away from social activism towards more commercial goals. As a result, a huge number of St. Pauli fans around the world were surprised to see their club's symbol deemed such a threat to the security of Britons that teachers, doctors and nurses needed to be made aware of it as part of a UK Counter Terrorism Police document distribute­d widely last week.

Surprise names on document "Our initial reaction was one of shock, then we understood more about the document and it became a feeling of hilarity," the

Manchester St. Pauli fan group told DW. "The fact a second division team in Germany can have such an impact that British Security Forces recognize it is something we should be proud of."

The 24-page document, which was presented in public sector briefings last summer, was uncovered by British newspaper The Guardian. It also listed Greenpeace, Stop the Badger Cull and Extinction Rebellion along with images of a swastika and emblems representi­ng jihadi groups and the National Front.

A club spokespers­on told DW that St. Pauli's presence on such a list was wholly unexpected and said they have contacted UK police to try and find out why they were deemed a threat. DW have also contacted the police with questions but so far there has been no response.

However, Deputy Assistant Commission­er Dean Haydon, senior national coordinato­r for the UK's Counter Terrorism Policing, has released a statement saying the presence of "legitimate protest groups" on the list was to "help police and close partners identify and understand signs and symbols they may encounter in their dayto-day working lives, so they know the difference between the symbols for the many groups they might come across."

Players and fans react

While the German club were not mentioned by name, Haydon said: "We don’t consider those groups to be extremist, we do not consider them to be a threat to national security."

Though St. Pauli will not release a statement until they have heard from the police, they retweeted a message of support from on-loan Welsh defender James Lawrence which expressed his pride in supporting the club's values.

Those sentiments were also shared by Manchester St. Pauli. "UK fans continue to be drawn to St. Pauli because of the values the club hold dear, that our fans have shaped the attitudes of the club," their statement to DW read. "There is nowhere in Britain where you can be that open about your views, and know the person next to you shares them, and the club will defend your right to say them."

tacular scoring ability of others, perhaps it's due to his inconsiste­ncy, but maybe it's also because his career, while solid, has not been what it might have been. Once a member of a promising attacking duo with Roberto Firmino in Hoffenheim and touted as a possible solution to

Germany's striking problem, Volland enters 2020 with a modest scoring record across his career. In short, it's hard not to think of what kind of player Volland might have been.

Granted, he has suffered from things beyond his control. His first year at Leverkusen was tough, he was involved with the Germany team during an era of mass denial about the need for transition, and although not falling foul to any major injuries he has suffered from one or two along the way. In many ways playing for Leverkusen, a club famous for its perennial ability to not quite deliver on its potential, is fitting for Volland.

There's been enough clamour about the forward deserving not only more recognitio­n but also a recall to the Germany squad. And there is a case to be made that the once Germany U21 team captain and now vice captain of Leverkusen is exactly what the Germany team needs. Solid, tireless but experience­d, the softlyspok­en but funny Volland is a man for the team; a back-to-goal striker who makes up for his lack of height with plenty of presence.

"To play for Germany in a major tournament would be the highlight of a career," Volland said after the win in Paderborn. For Volland to ensure his 10th Germany appearance back in 2016 is not his last, the striker needs a bit of luck and a few more highlights.

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