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Racism pops up in Serbia again

By Reuters in Belgrade | China Daily | Updated: 2012-10-19 07:59

Ugly scene after England defeats host in qualifier in nation with history of trouble

Even a ban from international soccer may not prove enough to rid Serbia of its perennial problems with racism and hooliganism, such is the deep-rooted intolerance among fans.

England's Danny Rose said he was racially abused by supporters in the Serbian city of Krusevac during Tuesday's European Under-21 Championship qualifier, which ended in an on-pitch brawl after England won 2-0 on aggregate to reach next year's finals.

"Unfortunately, we don't have Maggie Thatcher," Bosko Jaksic, a columnist for the popular daily Politika, told Reuters Television in reference to the strong-willed former British prime minister.

"This country hasn't solved the problem of hooliganism at any scale at all and hence some Serbian fans think it's legitimate to voice racist slogans because they think it's no worse than booing or jeering their team's opponents.

"They don't understand the difference, they don't realize the real dangers of racism and we will have to face the consequences as well as learn some very tough lessons."

Television footage from the fixture, which England won 1-0 with the last kick of the game, suggested Rose was the victim of incessant monkey chants by hundreds of Serbian fans who also pelted him and his teammates with missiles as they celebrated the goal.

Rose was sent off after the final whistle amid a melee among players and officials.

The Serbian Football Association (FSS) denied the racism allegations and said in a statement the home team was provoked by Rose's "inappropriate, unsportsmanlike and vulgar manner towards the supporters".

Violent history

Soccer violence was rare in communist Yugoslavia, confined to sporadic punch-ups when Belgrade's big clubs, Red Star and Partizan, locked horns with Croatian rivals Dinamo Zagreb and Hajduk Split, or Bosnian frontrunner Sarajevo.

That changed in the run-up to the bloody Balkan conflicts and the fuse was lit when Red Star's visit to Dinamo in May 1990 resulted in a mass riot that left 60 people seriously injured, some of them stabbed, shot and poisoned by tear gas.

One of the backlashes to Serbia's rapidly declining economy and political problems of the past 20 years was domestic soccer violence, which spiraled out of control, with the culprits often getting away with slaps on the wrist if they were punished at all.

French fan Brice Taton died in the hospital after he was beaten by Partizan fans before a Europa League match against Toulouse in September 2009, two years after a Red Star fan attacked a policeman with a flare and was later jailed for 10 years after being found guilty of attempted murder.

The landmark verdict, however, did not stop the hooligans from exporting their violence and Serbia had to play a Euro 2012 qualifier behind closed doors after an October 2010 riot in Italy, when its fans hurled flares onto the pitch.

The game in Genoa was abandoned after seven minutes as Serbia fans, who also stormed their own team bus and attacked goalkeeper Vladimir Stojkovic before kickoff, ignored pleas from the players to behave.

Uncertain fate

Rose, the English players' association and former England captain Paul Ince have called on UEFA to ban Serbia from international competition and appeals for clemency by the FSS might also fall on deaf ears if the European soccer governing body decides it has had enough.

UEFA president Michel Platini has previously said Serbia could face a ban from international or European club soccer if racist fan behavior continues.

Anti-racism campaigns have slammed UEFA in the past for only issuing fines.

At Euro 2012 in June, Denmark's Nicklas Bendtner was fined 20,000 euros ($26,200) more for exposing an illegal advert on his underpants than Croatia was for racist chanting by its fans.

Ince, whose son Tom played in Tuesday's match, said the scenes were "disgraceful".

"If it was me, they (Serbia) would be kicked out for the next five tournaments - European, World Cups - but they will get a little ban and that will be it," Ince told ESPN television.

While Jaksic believes it would be unfair to punish the entire country for the misconduct of a minority, he also stressed a ban would send a loud and clear message to the government that they need to do more.

 

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