Racism fears mar Euro 2012 kick-off
Black players taunted with monkey chants, Asian students
beaten :
POLAND: Euro 2012 kicked-off in Poland and Ukraine on Friday
amid fears that racism and politics could overshadow Europe's premier football
showcase, held for the first time in countries once behind the Iron Curtain.
Warsaw and Kiev hoped to use the tournament to highlight progress in their
ex-Communist countries, but instead have seen it mired in controversy over
racist fans and Ukraine's treatment of a top opposition leader. Hours before
kick-off at the opening match in Warsaw Friday -- which saw host Poland tie 1-1
with Greece -- Dutch captain Mark van Bommel said his team heard racist chants
during a public training session in the southern Polish city of Krakow.
“We all heard the monkey chants,” van Bommel was quoted as
saying by the Dutch De Telegraaf newspaper. “We can't accept that.”
A BBC television documentary broadcast last month showed
football fans in the two countries making Nazi salutes, taunting black players
with monkey chants, and beating Asian students.
Concern over potential racism-related violence also prompted
former England captain Sol Campbell, who is black, to warn fans to “stay home,
watch it on TV... don't even risk it”.
The host countries said the claims did not give a true
picture of the situation on the ground, with Poland's organisers even extending
a personal invitation to Campbell.
Dutch footballing legend Ruud Gullit said Friday in Warsaw
he hoped the racist chants were a one-off “incident” and urged the hosts to
address the problem.
“The world is watching, you have the possibility to tackle
this -- take this opportunity,” he said.
Much of the spotlight ahead of the opening kick has also
focused on Ukraine's treatment of its former prime minister and opposition
leader Yulia Tymoshenko, who has been jailed for seven years on charges the
European Union says are politically motivated.
AFP
No comments