Times of Malta

UEFA settles claim with Liverpool fans over Paris final chaos

-

A civil legal claim involving Liverpool supporters who suffered physical and mental injury at the 2022 Champions League final in Paris has been settled, European football governing body UEFA announced yesterday.

UEFA added a “full and final settlement” had been agreed with fans represente­d by two sets of lawyers, in Liverpool firm Bingham Long and the London-based Pogust Goodhead, who had made personal injury claims.

Football chiefs said the settlement details would remain confidenti­al.

Last year, an independen­t report found UEFA bore “primary responsibi­lity” for the failures which almost led to European club football’s showpiece match becoming a “mass fatality catastroph­e”.

Severe congestion outside the Stade de France in Paris led to thousands of Liverpool supporters being hemmed in against perimeter fences and stuck in a motorway underpass ahead of the final, which they lost 1-0 to Real Madrid.

Fans, who had already been targeted by local youths trying to steal tickets, were then teargassed and pepper sprayed by police, with kick-off delayed by more than 30 minutes.

“UEFA has already taken a number of steps following the 2022 final, including implementi­ng recommenda­tions from the independen­t review and establishi­ng a special refund scheme,” their statement issued yesterday said.

“The parties have agreed the terms of this statement but that the terms of the settlement will otherwise remain confidenti­al,” added the statement, which also said an agreement officials hoped would provide “closure” had been reached “without any admission of liability”.

Matt Douglas, a Liverpool fan who was involved, said in an article published by the two law firms: “I was next to a waisthigh security divide which was about to fall over with the waves of pressure, and eventually I had to climb it rather than fall over it.

“I still got injured. I broke my rib and have since been signed off work with it.

“Once we entered the ground, it got no better, we were hit with the aftermath of tear gas, and our eyes were stinging.”

Douglas, who said he had suffered PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder), was scathing in his assessment of European football authoritie­s.

“UEFA owed a duty of care to the fans, and they failed in that duty,” he said.

For many Liverpool fans the scenes revived memories of a crush at Hillsborou­gh before and during the abandoned 1989 FA Cup semi-final against Nottingham Forest that resulted in the deaths of 97 supporters.

The independen­t report also said it was “troubled” by the authoritie­s’ attempts to blame Liverpool fans without tickets for the chaos “without any evidential basis”.

“Assertions that late, ticketless supporters were either the primary cause or contribute­d to the dangerous events have a particular resonance with Hillsborou­gh, where similar allegation­s were made... and persisted for decades before being comprehens­ively disproved,” the report explained.

Gerard Long, managing director of Bingham Long, said yesterday: “As a local firm, it was important for us to be able to report back to (fans) that we had resolved the matter without lengthy legal proceeding­s, and they will receive some compensati­on.”

 ?? ?? Liverpool supporters will benefit from a settlment with UEFA after the 2022 Champions league final chaos.
Liverpool supporters will benefit from a settlment with UEFA after the 2022 Champions league final chaos.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta