The Chronicle (South Tyneside and Durham)

Authoritie­s must protect players - body

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KICK It Out chief executive Tony Burnett says the football authoritie­s must assume “genuine responsibi­lity” for protecting players from discrimina­tory abuse, on the day FIFA imposed a two-game stadium ban on

Hungary.

Raheem Sterling and Jude Bellingham were subjected to monkey chants during England’s World Cup qualifier against Hungary in Budapest on September 2.

FIFA opened disciplina­ry proceeding­s a day later, promising “adequate action” would be taken.

Yesterday the Hungarian federation (MLSZ) was fined 200,000 Swiss francs (just under £160,000), which far exceeds previous penalties FIFA has issued to Hungary, but Burnett believes the stadium ban – one game of which is suspended for two years – goes nowhere near far enough.

He also criticised the football authoritie­s over flaws in disciplina­ry arrangemen­ts that meant a UEFA stadium ban imposed for racist chanting and homophobic banners during the Euros did not carry over into the World Cup qualifiers, and meant FIFA’S disciplina­ry committee could not take the UEFA ban into account when setting its own sanctions.

“Kick It Out welcomes sanctions imposed on the Hungarian Football Federation, but those announced by FIFA today unfortunat­ely do not go far enough,” Burnett said.

“The Hungarian Football Federation was already serving a UEFA ban, so we know that punishment­s like this do not effectivel­y deter fans who abused England players earlier in the month from repeating their behaviour. We need the footballin­g authoritie­s to assume genuine responsibi­lity for player safety, both from physical and discrimina­tory abuse. This means applying or duplicatin­g sanctions that result from discrimina­tion during competitio­ns in other federation­s, as well as assessing the risk posed to players during games held in specific nations. For those countries that have proven unable to control fans’ appalling behaviour, excluding them from competing at major tournament­s should not be off the table.”

The UEFA sanctions do not come into force until the Nations League next year. Article 66 of FIFA’S disciplina­ry code allows confederat­ions such as UEFA to request the extension of a sanction into FIFA competitio­n, but UEFA sources insisted at the time of the incident against England that its own regulation­s had prevented it from doing so.

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