The West to humiliate Serbia internationally for game of football

15.10.2010 

 


Serbia may face serious problems with joining the European Union. The football 
team of the country can be excluded from Euro 2012 qualifying tournament. All 
this can happen because of the violence, which Serbian football fans showed in 
Italy. Expert Timur Blokhin told Pravda.Ru that the connection between the 
violence and politics was obvious. Serious measures, if taken against Serbia, 
would be a demonstration of double standards, though.


Football became the key political event of the week in Europe. The match 
between the teams of Serbia and Italy was set on October 12 in Genoa. Both 
Italian and Serbian football fans are know for their aggressive behavior. Three 
days before the game, Serbia unexpectedly lost to Estonia. Fans showered their 
players with criticism, although it was impossible to presume that their 
revenge would materialize in such brutal actions.

Clashes between the Serbian fans and the police were reported prior to the 
match in Genoa. The fans attempted to approach the bus of the Serbian team to 
lynch their players: they even prepared a makeshift casket for goalkeeper 
Vladimir Stojkovic.

As soon as the players appeared on the field, the Serbian fans started throwing 
smoke flares at them. Foreign objects could be seen flying towards the Italian 
fans too.

The stadium turned into a battlefield. The players spent only six minutes on 
the field, and the referee decided to send them all back to their locker rooms. 
The match never started, and the police eventually took the situation under 
control. Seventeen Serbian fans were jailed.

Investigation showed that most of the aggressive fans were members of the 
Serbian nationalist movement known as 1389. The movement unites fans from 
different clubs, propagates the return of Kosovo and the expulsion of Muslims 
from Serbia. They also strongly disagreed with President Boris Tadic's idea to 
make their country a EU member.

By a twist of fate, it was Tadic who had to take the racket for his radical 
political adversaries. The Serbian president called Italian Prime Minister 
Silvio Berlusconi and apologized.

Football officials currently decide which sanctions can be applied to the 
Serbian team. On October 28, UEFA will gather for a special meeting to discuss 
the consequences of the football thuggery in Italy. It is not ruled out that 
the Serbian team will be withdrawn from the qualifying tournament for Euro 
2012. The team can also be punished with an automatic defeat of 0:3.

Any of these two penalties would be a demonstration of double standards. One 
may recollect the experience of Euro 2004 qualifying matches, between Georgia 
and Russia. As soon as the game started, Georgian fans began to shower the 
Russian players with political accusations shouting that Russia was occupying 
Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

The Georgian fans burnt the Russian flag and started throwing foreign objects 
at the Russians. The referee ordered to stop the game of football parody after 
the first half. Afterwards, when the bus of the Russian team was departing to 
the airport, the Georgians were throwing stones at it.

Strangely enough, UEFA showed no reaction. They simply decided to replay the 
match; the Georgian team was not even given an automatic defeat. Screaming 
political slogans at UEFA tribunes is considered a felony. However, the 
Georgian fans just got away with it.

There is every reason to believe that they will make a different decision for 
the Serbian team. Serbia was withdrawn from football tournaments in the 
beginning of the 1990s after the West found the country guilty of the 
horrendous war in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Most likely, it will not be just a matter of football sanctions. Italy's deputy 
foreign minister Alfredo Mantica stated on October 14 that the violence in 
Genoa could complicate the talks about Serbia's EU membership. Until recently, 
football violence has not been a reason to deny EU membership to Poland, 
Hungary and Croatia.

Timur Blokhin, an expert for former Yugoslavia, said in an interview with 
Pravda.Ru that there was obviously no excuse to the behavior of the Serbian 
fans.

"How on earth could they make a casket for their goalie? That violence only 
plays into the hands of Serbia's enemies - Western journalists. They marvel the 
mess now to substantiate the image of the Serbs as bloody barbarians who are 
responsible for the genocide of "poor" Kosovars and Bosnian Muslims.

"At the same time, it is easy to find an explanation to the behavior of the 
Serbian fans. Many of them feel humiliated because of the events in Kosovo and 
Bosnia and Herzegovina. They are overemotional about it. As a rule, violence is 
committed by those people who are unhappy with their lives. It is hard to 
imagine Swede fans stoning the bus of their national team.

"Connecting football violence with Serbia's EU membership is strange, to say 
the least. Croatia and Poland should never become EU members if we proceed from 
that. England should be shown the door in this case. If Serbia is excluded from 
qualifying games it will be a blatant incident. The Georgians were not excluded 
from anywhere eight years ago, but this is pure politics. The things, which 
friends of the West can do freely, are not allowed to be done by those who have 
been labeled as hellspawn for 20 years.

Vadim Trukhachev 
Pravda.Ru

 

http://english.pravda.ru/world/europe/15-10-2010/115388-serbia_football-0/ 

 

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