Post by QPR Report on Apr 21, 2009 16:03:14 GMT
The Copenhagen Post - Football fans subjected to full body search
Tuesday, 21 April 2009
Fans file complaints over strip searches conducted by police before last weekend’s FCK away match against AGF
Before Sunday’s clash between FC Copenhagen and AGF in Århus, around 175 of the visiting team’s fans underwent a full body-search by police - many having to remove all their clothing.
Police, who were there to prevent hooligan violence at the game, said they had a tip that some fans on board the buses from Copenhagen were carrying roman candles and narcotics. But the officers were apparently not content with a simple pad down, and now many of the humiliated fans have filed official complaints over the incident with the Crown Attorney’s office.
Andreas Jensen, one of the searched fans, said he was shaken by the experience. He said that after removing their outer clothing they were told to remove their underwear to facilitate a more intimate body search.
‘When I asked if it was legal the officer said that if I wanted to see the game I ought to just co-operate,’ Jensen told Politiken newspaper.
Police said they found hash, amphetamines and some fireworks in the bus, but no weapons or other illegal materials were found as a result of the full body searches.
Although the procedure may have been conducted legally, East Jutland police chief Bent Preben Nielsen found the incident objectionable.
‘Regardless of whether or not it was legal, I find it to be unethical and undignified,’ he said.
East Jutland superintendent Morten Anker Jensen said he believed the searches were properly carried out in a ‘closed or remote area’. But video taken by witnesses appeared to indicate the searches were performed close to the stadium and out in the open.
www.cphpost.dk/sport/120-sport/45460-football-fans-subjected-to-full-body-search.html
One match Penalty
Juve to play game behind closed doors for abuse
By Mark Meadows
MILAN, April 20 (Reuters) - Juventus will have to play their next home Serie A game behind closed doors after fans racially abused Inter Milan striker Mario Balotelli in Saturday's 1-1 draw, the Italian league said on Monday.
The 18-year-old scored Inter's opener in the top-of-the-table clash and was subjected to chants of "a black Italian does not exist" from sections of the Juve crowd in Turin.
Balotelli, an Italy under-21 international, was born in Palermo but is of Ghanaian descent.
"The sporting judge...considered that in the course of the game and on multiple occasions, fans of the home team, in various sections of the stadium, sang songs which included racial discrimination," a league statement said.
"Juventus are therefore obliged to play one game behind closed doors."
Juve, who host Lazio in an Italian Cup semi-final second leg on Wednesday, said in a statement they would appeal the decision to ban fans from the home game with Lecce on May 3.
Racist abuse is not uncommon in Italian soccer and small fines are usually handed out. However, the seriousness of Saturday's incidents have prompted the authorities to come down heavily on Juve.
DISCIPLINARY ACTION
The league normally decides on disciplinary action on the Tuesday following weekend games but brought the announcement forward this time.
The statement, in conjunction with the Italian soccer federation, added that the abuse was deplorable and could not be excused as sporting passion.
Italy, home of the world champions, is also battling a hooligan problem and missed out on hosting Euro 2012 partly because of soccer violence.
The Champions League final on May 27 will be held in Rome despite a series of minor stabbings around the Stadio Olimpico there in recent years.
A bid for Euro 2016 was recently launched and federation president Giancarlo Abete does not believe Saturday's racist chanting will affect Italy's chances.
"I express firm condemnation of the episode involving Balotelli. Italian football, however, is not the pits of the world," he told reporters.
Juve president Giovanni Cobolli Gigli apologised on Sunday and said Serie A had to end the culture of racism among fans.
Inter Milan president Massimo Moratti said earlier he would have pulled his team off the field if he had been present at Turin's Stadio Olimpico.
Claudio Ranieri's side, joint second in the league, are almost out of the title race with champions Inter holding a 10-point lead with six games left.
In 2006, twice European champions Juve were demoted to the second division for their involvement in a match-fixing scandal but were promoted back the following season.
football.uk.reuters.com/seriea/news/LK193248.php