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Fans aim to clean up Lazio’s image

The Laziale and Anti-fascist group is working to distance the club from its right-wing supporters

- Stanislas Touchot

Italian club Lazio have a deeply rooted stereotype that their fans are overwhelmi­ngly right-wing but a group of supporters have mobilised themselves to build a new Laziale and Anti-fascist (LAF) identity.

The emblematic eagle of the Stadio Olimpico side, also the symbol of the fascist party of Benito Mussolini, under the slogan “Love Lazio, Fight Fascism” is one of the stickers printed by LAF.

The group, created in 2011, aims to “destroy the stereotype of the Fascist Laziale in Italy and throughout the world,” one of the administra­tors of its Facebook page told AFP, on condition of anonymity.

LAF claims it has several thousand followers, several hundred active members, and says it pursues a twofold aim.

Its two goals are “to erase from the name of Lazio any infamous political label” and “to prevent neo-fascist movements from continuing to use the Curva Nord (North Stand) from indoctrina­ting young people who have entered the stadium only to support Lazio”.

But doing so will be difficult as the Roman club has regularly been sanctioned for the political excesses of some of its supporters.

On Thursday, Lazio will host Celtic in the Europa League, a fixture for which local authoritie­s have imposed exceptiona­l security measures.

The Curva Nord will also be closed as punishment for fascist salutes by a section of the crowd during a match against French club Rennes.

In the reverse fixture in Scotland, travelling fans were filmed making fascist, raised-arm salutes in Glasgow city centre.

They were greeted at Parkhead by a banner from Celtic supporters with an image of Mussolini hanging by his feet and the message “Follow Your Leader”.

In April in Milan, Lazio supporters paid tribute to the dictator with a flag saying “Honour to Benito Mussolini” at Piazzale Loreto, where his body was exposed and then hung upside down after his execution in 1945. The banner was signed “IRR” — the Irriducibi­li — Lazio’s main hardcore ultra supporters group.

“The Curva Nord has been under the control of the Irriducibi­li for 30 years and they conquered it with the help of organised crime at the expense of the Eagles supporters,” explained the unnamed head of LAF, in reference to the group, which dominated the stand from the late 1970s to the 1980s.

Within the Irriducibi­li, “if we talk about activists who are really active politicall­y, we talk in dozens, it’s not even a hundred,” Sébastien Louis, a sociologis­t specialisi­ng in radical groups across Europe told AFP in 2017.

The fringe group’s influence makes it easy to forget Lazio’s original stance against far-right views.

They refused to bow to Mussolini’s desire to merge different capital city clubs, which resulted in the birth of arch-rivals Roma in 1927.

The current-day anti-fascists are trying to build another image, with the support of fans from other clubs, like with the event organised in Rome before last Thursday’s European tie by fans of Celtic and the group Laziali di Sinistra (Laziale Left) in a community centre.

“Among us are active communists, anarchists, socialists, social democrats, liberals and others who do not care: it is not the political ideology that counts but the way that each one of us actively goes about their antifascis­m,” explained the LAF leader.

He added that the issue of racism in football grounds is apparent across Italy and was highlighte­d by the incident between Mario Balotelli and Verona supporters last weekend.

“The vast majority of Italian stands are in the hands of neo-fascist groups,” he said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Kick it out: Anti-fascist and anti-racist stickers printed by the Laziale and Antifascis­t group to fight the stereotype about the club’s supporters.
Photo: Andreas Solaro/afp
Kick it out: Anti-fascist and anti-racist stickers printed by the Laziale and Antifascis­t group to fight the stereotype about the club’s supporters. Photo: Andreas Solaro/afp

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