The Herald (South Africa)

Spain arrests seven men after racist incidents targeting Vinicius Jr

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Police detained seven men over separate alleged hate crime incidents against Real Madrid player Vinicius Jr as Spain’s main soccer league urged changes to Spanish law that would enable it to take steps to curb racism in stadiums.

Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti expressed support for Vinicius Jr, whom he expected would remain at the club.

He lambasted Spain’s “obsolete” protocols to deal with racism in the sport and said he would consider taking his players off the field if they were abused again during a game as Vinicius Jr was in Sunday’s La Liga match at Valencia.

Puma, the sponsor of both Valencia and La Liga, also offered its support to Vinicius Jr, as did Spanish bank Santander, whose title sponsorshi­p with La Liga ends after this season.

“At Puma, we do not tolerate racism, we condemn discrimina­tion in any form and stand in solidarity with Vinicius Junior,” Puma said in a statement.

A hate crime investigat­ion was opened after an inflatable effigy dressed in the No 20 jersey of winger Vinicius Jr was hung from a bridge in front of the club’s training grounds.

Alongside it was a 16m red and white banner — the colours of rival team Atletico Madrid — that read “Madrid hates Real”.

Four men were arrested in Madrid, police said, three of whom were members of “a radical group of fans of a Madrid club”, who were previously flagged during matches as high risk to help curb violence during games.

Three men were also arrested in Valencia for racist conduct aimed at Vinicius Jr in Sunday’s match, police said on Twitter.

Vinicius Jr, in a social media post, called the racist abuse inhuman and asked sponsors and broadcaste­rs to hold La Liga accountabl­e.

Valencia’s south stand will be partially closed for five matches and the club fined €45,000 (R934,000), the Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) announced on Tuesday.

However, La Liga said in an earlier statement that it felt impotent to tackle the issue while Spanish legislatio­n limited its actions to merely detecting and reporting racist incidents.

It urged that the law be modified so it could cancel matches and ban fans from stadiums if racist behaviour was detected.

“La Liga is extremely frustrated by the lack of sanctions and conviction­s by sporting disciplina­ry bodies, public administra­tions and courts public administra­tions and the jurisdicti­onal bodies to which complaints are made,” it said in a statement.

Vinicius has expressed frustratio­n that La Liga has not exerted pressure on the Spanish soccer federation, which does have the power to apply stadium closures and bans, according to sources.

The federation can cancel a match if racist insults continue after a 10-minute period in which the game is paused and the crowd warned. To date, no match in Spain has enforced it.

The Brazilian player was particular­ly aggrieved by comments made by La Liga president Javier Tebas on Sunday, in which he accused the player of failing to turn up to meetings so that La Liga could explain what it has been doing to address racism, sources close to the player said.

Vinicius was initially receptive to a meeting held behind closed doors, according to the sources, but turned it down, believing the La Liga administra­tor was seeking publicity by holding it at its Madrid offices.

La Liga declined to comment on the meeting while the federation did not respond to a request for comment about its powers to cancel matches.

The federation and La Liga said they were launching a campaign against racism. —

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