Saturday Star

Cocaine use fuelling the process

Ready supply of the drug a key factor in the racial abuse and physical attacks marring UK game

- IAN HERBERT Daily Mail

THE BRAWL which left two men lying on a street in Watford, one apparently unconsciou­s with blood streaming down his face, was a mere footnote to the widening narrative of disorder in football.

One Watford fan tended to the seriously injured man, another screamed “you f ****** coward” and a group of Everton fans ran away from the scene into town. Paramedics were called. The injured, it later transpired, were a father and son. And the world quickly moved on.

Another despicable piece of disorder that Saturday in January – two Southampto­n fans mocking the death of Cardiff striker Emiliano Sala before a match between the two teams – nudged the Watford fight to the margins of the news cycle.

Merseyside Police were certainly interested, though. The incident came two weeks after a clash between Everton and Millwall fans in which the visiting contingent were not, in the words of one senior police officer familiar with the operation, “just a nice crowd looking for a spot to have a picnic”.

Some of the Everton fans involved belonged to the club’s ‘risk group’ of fans known as the ‘County Road Cutters’. They had tried to attack a Millwall pub before the fight which saw a fan’s face slashed.

These events might all sound like a throwback to the 1970s days of open football warfare, though another factor – the ready supply of cocaine – plays a new and significan­t part in the story.

One of the four Liverpudli­an men arrested and cautioned after the Watford incident was cautioned for affray and possession of cannabis. Another was bailed in connection with violent disorder, possession of cocaine and grievous bodily harm.

Three days after the Watford episode, police raided two Everton coaches set to leave for a midweek game at Cardiff City. Substantia­l quantities of cocaine were seized. One of the drivers was arrested on suspicion of drug-driving.

The incidents illustrate cocaine’s role in rising levels of disorder at football grounds. There was a 36 percent jump in the 2016/17 season and a further increase last year.

“The quantity of cocaine is difficult to assess,” said Deputy

Chief Constable Mark Roberts, the National Police Chiefs’ Council football policing lead. “Unless you arrest them and drug test them or find them in possession, you don’t know. But we do think the rise in violence is linked to a parallel rise in cocaine use.”

The recent attack on Aston Villa’s Jack Grealish by a Birmingham

City supporter illustrate­d the consequenc­es of clubs cutting costs by using stewards rather than police. Even the Premier League now admits that the game has gone too far in its moves to save on police costs.

The cocaine problem reveals the same issue, in microcosm. While police can arrest and charge those found in possession, a security firm can only refuse entry to a ground if they find a cocaine packet. That, says one police source, is counterpro­ductive. “You just end up with a coked-up, frustrated fan on the outside of the ground, who becomes a problem for someone else.”

The cocaine blight reflects the increasing prevalence and use of cocaine in society as a whole. Home Office figures show that six percent of people aged 16-59 took cocaine in 2017-18, up from 2.4 percent in 2013-14. “It’s widely available, in cheaper and purer form,” said Oxford University anthropolo­gist Dr Martha Newson. “It’s purchasabl­e on the dark web and can be delivered to the door. No knowledge of the criminal underworld is needed and it transcends class divisions.”

Dr Newson’s research has charted the way that football violence allows fans to conform to ‘group identities’ as part of a tribal ‘attack and defend’ psychology. Cocaine, she said, fuels that process. “The combinatio­n of cocaine inflating someone’s ego and a fan tribe culture, where group identity is so essential, creates a lethal combinatio­n,” she added.

In a pub near one Premier League top-six club, supporters have been seen snorting cocaine off keys, credit cards and their hands. In a stairwell at another top-six venue, a group of six well-spoken fans gathered to share more of the drug at half-time. They did not even bother to seek out the seclusion of the toilets.

A newspaper investigat­ion into the problem saw toilet cubicles at Scottish games involving Celtic, Rangers, Hearts, Hibernian, Aberdeen and Hamilton swabbed. Traces of the Class A drug were found in all six. There was even evidence of cocaine being used in the family section toilets in Celtic’s Lisbon Lions Stand.

Ten years ago, cocaine use was more limited to some of the major hooligan groups, including Manchester United’s, who considered it a novelty. Users tended to be older fans. But its accessibil­ity and price means that fans of every descriptio­n now take it. “You’re going to struggle to find these packets outside or inside a football ground,” said one experience­d football police officer, who has worked at Premier League games. “But you’re really going to struggle if you just have stewards patting people down.

“These little packets are hard to detect. Fans will secrete them in their hoods. Bear in mind that they are even secreting flares in a Jaffa Cake packet – you can see the challenge of finding a gram of cocaine, the size of two paracetamo­l packets. When there’s no police to enforce things, what chance is there of finding it?”

Roberts said greater use of drug detection dogs would be a positive step, as would a “sensible level of policing”.

On Merseyside, officers are looking to win what battles they can. There was an element of surprise to the coach searches, which came at 2pm on a Tuesday and involved officers working with Everton and the Driving Standards Agency.

“Our primary aim is to protect people of all ages who want to go to football matches to support their team, free from the fear of violence and disorder,” said the force’s Inspector Mark Keenan.

Roberts said the episodes which escaped national attention were often the most significan­t. “There’s a justifiabl­e outcry when players are racially abused or attacked on a pitch. There’s a brief spike of interest and people say something must be done. I’d like to see the same outrage when a fan is attacked and left on a street.” |

 ??  ?? GROUPS of Liverpool and Sevilla fans before the 2016 Europa League final.| KEYSTONE AP
GROUPS of Liverpool and Sevilla fans before the 2016 Europa League final.| KEYSTONE AP
 ??  ?? RIVAL football fans going at it.| REUTERS
RIVAL football fans going at it.| REUTERS

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