Stadium ban for EU hooligans undermines civil rights

February 3, 2012 by Tjebbe van Tijen

the illustrated and documented version with links can be found at:

http://limpingmessenger.wordpress.com/2012/02/03/stadium-ban-for-eu-hooligans-undermines-civil-rights/

[tableau with fused picture of football hooligans with different national 
police officers in uniform and an EU shield with the text "si  vis pacem para 
bellum"]


EUROPEAN FOOTBALL STADIUM BAN FOR HOOLIGANS… Ahmed Aboutaleb major of the City 
of Rotterdam rejoices today the European Parliament initiative for an European 
level implementation of banning locally convicted football hooligans from all 
EU stadiums.  (1) This law initiative has been long in the making. An earlier 
document  by the Council of the European Union “Resolution of the Council on 
preventing and restraining football hooliganism through the exchange of 
experience, exclusion from stadiums and media policy” dates back to the year 
1997:

The responsible Ministers invite their national sports associations to examine, 
in accordance with national law, how stadium exclusions imposed under civil law 
could also apply to football matches in a European context.

However much I dislike football hooligans this is a juridical precedent which 
will have far reaching negative consequences for civil rights in general. Not 
only does it create yet another centrally managed person database that can be 
accessed by all EU police forces (like data on persons DNA, illegal migrants 
and so on) it is a further step in constructing a ‘central EU police force’ 
with all its inherent dangers. Such an EU-wide anti-hooligan law also means 
multiplied condemnation – for a big part of the European continent – on the 
basis of a local conviction.

Together with actual proposals (in the Netherlands) for ‘whole sale mass 
arrests’,  not only hooligan “leaders”, but also of their “followers” 
(‘meeloophooligens’ is the Dutch term), we can be certain that such an 
extra-national banning and black-listing power, will be abused in ways beyond 
our imagination. Once such a law and its enforcement has been put into effect, 
other ‘social distinct groups’ whose behaviour is classified as unruly can get 
the same routine treatment in the future. The Council of Europe document of 
1997 cited above speaks of “preventing and containing of disorder”, so one need 
not to be surprised when other forms of  ”disorder” will be handled in the long 
run in the same way. For instance, when we take in account the frequent 
attempts by politicians – defending employers interest - to criminalise strike 
actions, trade union activists could be databased and blacklisted with the same 
‘anti-hooligan routine’.

—-
(1) It is interesting to note that the ‘hooligan-ban’ proposals in the European 
Parliament plenary session of  February 2. 2012, was part of a bundle of all 
kind of measures related to sport listed in this order: – Promote sport for 
girls; – Blacklist hooligans; – Make doping a criminal offence; – Regulate 
sport agents; -Combine learning and training. The resolution – thus packaged – 
has been passed with 550 votes in favour, 73 against and 7 abstentions. In the 
section of hooligans is also this sentence: “MEPs also call on Member States 
and sports governing bodies to commit to tackling homophobia and racism against 
athletes.” Something problematic in the sense of ‘civil rights’ has been hidden 
inside a package of mostly emancipatory proposals.





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