|
|
News/Events
Latest News
Samuel Eto makes Anti-racism protest
Barcelona striker Samuel Eto'o threatened to leave the pitch after being subjected to racial abuse by Real Zaragoza supporters on Saturday. Eto'o was eventually persuaded to continue playing by coach Frank Rijkaard and several team-mates.
Referee Victor Esquinas Torres stopped play during Barca's 2-0 win to ask for an announcement to be made to the crowd calling for an end to the abuse.
Real Zaragoza were fined 600 euros last season after Eto'o was racially abused.
"It was a shame - Samuel is a human being and he felt bad on the pitch," Rijkaard said.
"But I was pleased with the attitude of his team-mates who told him to continue.
"He proved he was able to overcome the circumstances and he made a valuable contribution to our victory.
The Spanish Federation have to start taking proper measures and we as black players also have to act Zaragoza striker Ewerthon
"It's a real shame that things like this happen as it is thanks to players like Samuel that the fans come to the stadium to be entertained.
"I would also like to say that the referee acted very well."
Real Zaragoza were also fined 600 euros (£400) earlier this month when their fans directed racist insults at Real Betis' forward Robert.
Zaragoza striker Ewerthon said he was ashamed of the action of the club's fans.
"I'm black too," he said.
"I'm a Zaragoza player and totally opposed to the fans who did this. I've been abused too at other grounds in Spain but we need to rise above this.
"The Spanish Federation have to start taking proper measures and we as black players also have to act.
"We are here to work and if things carry on like this it will be impossible."
source: BBC sport
full text>
Kerr reveals Racists targetted Republic stars
Thursday 19th, January 2006 Racists sent hate mail to members of the Republic of Ireland team while Brian Kerr was manager, it emerged today.
Former team boss Kerr, revealed that a handful of racist letters were sent to some of Ireland's top players.
International stars such as Clinton Morrison, Stephen Reid and coach Chris Hughton were targeted.
The letters have been passed on to gardai.
Speaking ahead of a seminar organised by Sport Against Racism Ireland, Kerr said the hate mail was vile and abusive.
"While I was manager of the Irish team I had to put up with a series of letters, very vile and abusive letters, about the multi-culturalism of the Irish team," Kerr said.
full text>
Sports stars shocked at racism
Show Racism the Red Card Poster launchBy Karl Mc Ginty (Irish Independent) "FIX," snorted an urchin at the back, his voice rich with Dublin devilment and just a touch of disappointment. Like most young lads in the large, sweltering room, he'd had his eyes on the prize, a soccer ball signed by Liverpool's UEFA Cup-winning heroes.
Yet the winning ticket was held by Adetoyese Kemi, a student at The Kings Inn Secondary School for girls.
Of course it wasn't a fix. Just a delicious twist of fate which brought yesterday's formal launch of soccer's "Show Racism the Red Card" campaign in Ireland to a splendid conclusion.
With 20,000 free posters of the Republic of Ireland team and an educational CD-Rom available for distribution to schools, the campaign is making a determined effort to educate the nation's children through sport.
And as Kemi went up to collect her prize, one of her chums, just 17 and also from Nigeria, chatted briefly about the harsh realities of being young and black on the streets of Dublin right now.
Though immensely happy in school, she told of the sickening catalogue of abuse she endures daily from complete strangers and which, she confessed, "makes life miserable for blacks.
"We are usually told 'f..k off back home to where you came from' or they call us black monkeys," she said, fixing me straight in the eye as she asked: "Do I look like a monkey to you?"
She told of drivers shutting bus doors and speeding off before she can board. Or how "sometimes when I sit down, the person beside me will get up and go elsewhere.
"I don't understand it. Where I come from, if we saw whites we welcomed them warmly. But it's not just blacks. It applies to Russians or Chinese as well. People don't want us. Any of us."
The stars of English soccer have long played an influential role in making young people aware of the evils of racism.
Now the gospel according to Jed Grebby, the Newcastle United fan who started the hugely influential "Give Racism the Red Card" movement in Britain five years ago, has spread here.
At a function in the Irish Film Centre similar to many which have taken place at Premiership grounds all around England, Ireland aces Curtis Fleming and Kenny Cunningham sat with Steve McGuinness and Liam Kelly of St Pats and spoke frankly to a group of youngsters of the problem and the hurt it causes.
Grebby and the campaign's Dublin organiser, Gareth Mullen, opened proceedings by showing a 20 minute educational video featuring 73 famous football players, managers and personalities from 18 different nations.
Many Irish faces, from Paul McGrath to Niall Quinn, were prominent yet the words of England superstar Rio Ferdinand were particularly striking.
Ferdinand told how he'd be repeatedly stopped, as often as twice in ten minutes, by police suspicious of a young black driving an expensive car, to which Fleming quipped: "There's only two options, you're either a wealthy sportsman or a drugs dealer."
The chortling stopped when the £18m Leeds ace revealed that he had been a school with Steven Lawrence and of his fond regard for a cheerful, inoffensive youngster beaten to death by racists on a London street, a murder for which, controversially, there have been no convictions.
When the video stopped playing and questions were invited from the floor, up popped a little hand at the back. "Curtis, were you ever slagged off in school," asked a lad whose ginger hair matched his Manchester United jersey.
Revealing he was born and bred in Ballybough, Curtis said he and his brother had a few scrapes in the playground. "We got called nig nogs and all that ending up with me going home and crying. I'm 32 now and I still remember it. Maybe that tells you how much it hurt."
Fleming and Cunningham, though resident in England for the past 10 years, spoke of the unsettling aura they have noticed on the streets of their native city on recent visits home.
"I was used to being just one of the lads here but the looks I get now are a little different, until I open my mouth and they hear my Dublin accent," Curtis explains.
full text>
Di CANIO TO STOP FASCIST SALUTES
Thursday 5 Jan, 2006 4:45pm Lazio's Paolo di Canio has promised to stop his raised-arm salutes for the time being. But Di Canio said he intended to continue to contest any disciplinary action against him.
"I have had time to reflect and have decided to put the good of Lazio before my interests," said the 37-year-old.
Battle for liberty
"For the moment, I will avoid certain displays in public. But I will continue my battle for liberty in other ways with the help of my lawyers."
Di Canio was fined 10,000 Euros and received a one-game ban after performing the Nazi-style salute against Juventus in Serie A in December.
He is in the process of appealing against the punishment, with the Italian Football Association still to rule on a separate incident during a match against Livorno.
"I will avoid certain situations, but I will continue my battles, without second thoughts and with even more decisiveness," added Di Canio.
Facist not racist
In December, Di Canio defended his actions, insisting he was "a fascist but not a racist".
"I made the Roman salute because it's a salute from a comrade to his comrades and was meant for my people.
"With this stiff arm I do no want to incite violence or racial hatred."
Di Canio also made a fascist salute at the end of Lazio's 3-1 win over city rivals AS Roma in January, receiving a 10,000 Euros fine.
The gestures have been attacked by politicians, players, fans and Jewish groups in Italy.
Sepp Blatter, president of world soccer's governing body Fifa, said players making fascist salutes should be banned from the game for life.
full text>
|
|