Berlusconi: Milan will repeat racism walk-off
Reuters - Friday 04 January 2013, 15:45
Racist
chanting that led AC Milan players to walk off the pitch during a
friendly match provoked howls of outrage in Italy on Friday, while club
owner Silvio Berlusconi vowed his team would abandon all matches where
they suffer similar abuse.
Milan's
Ghanaian midfielder Kevin-Prince Boateng kicked the ball into the
stands, removed his shirt and led his team-mates off the pitch 26
minutes into the match on Thursday after monkey chants and jeers from
fans of lower division team Pro Patria directed at him, Urby Emanuelson
and Sulley Muntari.
Boateng said he would do it again, even in a high profile match.
"I
don't care what game it is - a friendly, Italian league or Champions
League match - I would walk off again," the German-born 25-year-old told
CNN.
"I'm sad and angry that I'm the one that has to take action. All the people who support me would support me in a big game."
Milan's owner backed his player.
"I
guarantee that in all matches, including international ones, where
incidents of this type occur Milan will leave the field," former Italian
Prime Minister Berlusconi said.
The incident revived debate in Italy about whether authorities are doing enough to combat a deep-seated problem.
The
mayor of Busto Arsizio, the northern hometown of Pro Patria where the
incident occurred, said his administration would sue the fans
responsible for the chanting. Local police say they are questioning fans
to identify the culprits.
"We
have begun a civil claim against the imbecile thugs that have stained
the city," mayor Gigi Farioli told Sky Italia television.
"Tomorrow
an education drive will be launched, with concrete measures against
racism in and out of the stadium," he said, adding that AC Milan and the
players involved had been invited to participate. But he said Boateng
was "unprofessional" to kick the ball at chanting fans.
Boateng's
action was widely applauded, however, and prompted renewed criticism of
authorities for not taking stronger action to wipe out the racist
insults that are commonplace at Italian grounds.
"Finally,
thanks to Boateng, there has been an adequate response to the demented
people that chant racist choruses in the stadiums," wrote Pierluigi
Battista in an editorial in the respected Corriere della Sera daily.
He
called for games to be suspended and points deducted from the team of
the offending fans even in Serie A matches as soon as there was racist
chanting.
ANTI-SEMITIC ATTACK
Berlusconi,
who is currently running for election, said he admired the team's
response to "a disgraceful episode of racism" and said he had telephoned
Boateng to congratulate him.
France's
former AC and Inter Milan player Patrick Vieira said on Twitter: "Now
is the time for the football authorities to stand up and do something.
We need to see real actions that will have a genuine influence."
Italian
football federation (FIGC) president Giancarlo Abete said he had asked
for a meeting with Italy's police chief Antonio Manganelli to discuss
closer cooperation and a police presence in stadiums following the
incident.
He said authorities "could order the referee to suspend the match" in certain situations.
Late
last year 10 fans of London side Tottenham Hotspur, which has a large
contingent of Jewish supporters, were injured, one of them gravely, when
dozens of anti-semitic "ultras" stormed a central Rome bar in a
well-planned attack.
Pro Patria has been fined 15,000 euros over the last year for racist chants, Italian press reported.
Manchester
City and Belgium player Vincent Kompany was another of thousands to
express their support for Boateng's action on Twitter.
"Act
of racism against Boateng during Milan's friendly. How about becoming
extremely intolerant towards racist idiots? They need to be told," the
defender wrote.
Troubled
Manchester City player Mario Balotelli, himself the repeated target of
racist chants before he abandoned Italy to go and play in England,
praised Boateng's "brilliant work".
The
Italian striker, who has endured monkey chants and bananas thrown onto
the pitch, last year threatened to walk out of the European Championship if
he heard any racial slurs.
But the Pro Patria chairman, Roberto Centenaro, suggested tackling the problem would be difficult.
"You
certainly cannot change the mentality of people who have come to the
stadium for 30 years and have these ideas. Clearly we must start with
the young," he said.