As monkey chants boomed
around the Italian soccer stadium, Sulley Muntari became more incensed.
The
Associated Press report continues:
The
Ghanaian player sought out the referee and asked for intervention to silence
the fans hurling racist abuse. Referees have the power to stop games and have
warning messages amplified arounds stadiums. Nothing like that happened,
though, during Sunday's Serie A game on the island of Sardinia.
Instead
Muntari, exacerbated by the referee's indifference, repeatedly pointed at his
skin colour.
The
veteran Pescara midfielder's protests were apparently ignored, and it further
complaints from Muntari in the second half for the referee finally to act at
Cagliari.
But
what happened next has enraged players and anti-discrimination campaigners. Far
from being protected by the referee, Muntari was booked for dissent. Aghast,
Muntari walked off and was booked again for leaving the field without following
procedures - his two yellow cards amounting to a red, and ejection from the
game.
Even
when the incident was reviewed in the following days, Italian soccer
authorities sided with Cagliari against Muntari. The 32-year-old former Inter
and AC Milan midfielder was handed a one-match ban for receiving two yellow
cards. Cagliari escaped punishment because Serie A's disciplinary body said
only 10 fans were to blame.
"Only
a callous commission disciplinary would ignore the full picture of what went on
here," Piara Powar, executive director of the anti-discrimination Fare
Network, told The Associated Press. "It's set a very dangerous precedent.
There are recurring incidents and the Italian football authorities are not
dealing with them in the right way."
Muntari's
case hasn't been the only one in recent days. Both Inter Milan and Lazio were
found guilty by Serie A's disciplinary division after fans bellowed racist
abuse during games. The punishment for both teams was having parts of their
stadiums closed - but only if there is a repeat of the conduct.
For
Powar, who advises European soccer's governing body on discrimination, these
cases demonstrate a complete "failure of the regulatory processes."
It's
not a problem confined to one or two countries.
"It's
endemic across Europe at the moment," Powar said.
___
SANCTIONS
Derisory
fines were typical in racism cases until a high-profile incident in 2013
spurred the authorities into action.
Just
like last weekend, it saw a Ghanaian walking off an Italian soccer field that
sparked change. On that occasion, the whole AC Milan team joined in the protest
by Kevin-Prince Boateng. Within months, it resulted in sanctions being
strengthened across global soccer.
FIFA
insisted on a minimum five-game ban for racism by players, and European body
UEFA doubled the entry-level punishment in a tougher approach.
For
abuse by fans, a sliding scale of punishments was adopted. Parts of stadiums
could be closed for the first offense and further racist abuse should
ultimately result in fans being locked out completely. League officials also
have the power to dock points or relegate teams for serious repeated incidents.
Administrators
also face more rigorous scrutiny for discriminatory conduct. One of the
earliest offenders after the new rules were adopted was the man campaigning to
lead Italian soccer. Carlo Tavecchio was banned by UEFA for six months at the
start of his Italian federation presidency in 2014 over a reference to bananas
when discussing the presence of foreign players in Italy.
___
FRANCE
Corsica
has also been the scene of racist crimes at soccer this season. On a visit by
Nice to the French Mediterranean island in January, striker Mario Balotelli -
the son of Ghanaian immigrants to Italy - endured monkey chants being bellowed
at him by Bastia supporters. Bastia was given a suspended one-point deduction
and forced to close part of its stadium for three games.
___
BRITAIN
Scotland's
Glasgow derby last weekend saw a Rangers supporter make a monkey gesture at
Scott Sinclair after the Celtic player scored. The fan was quickly identified
and has already appeared in court.
England
has also been the scene of high-profile cases this decade. Luis Suarez was
banned for eight games in 2011 while playing for Liverpool, and Chelsea captain
John Terry was suspended for four games the following year. Two lower-league
players this season received the minimum five-game ban.
___
UEFA
The
disciplinary department at European soccer's governing body has also been
clamping down on racist chanting in continental fixtures. Serbia was warned in
March by UEFA that its teams could be kicked out of European competitions for
further infractions by fans. Croatia has also been targeted in the UEFA
crackdown, along with teams from Italy, Hungary Poland and Ukraine.
The pressing concern is Russia, host of the 2018 World Cup where there have been persistent reports of discriminatory displays and chants. Former Chelsea midfielder Alexei Smertin was put in charge of investigating soccer racism in Russia in February despite previously declaring: "There's no racism in Russia."
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