Referees Will Stop Games Where There Is Racial Abuse -
Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin.
The
Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin says he will ask referees to be
"brave" and stop matches where there is racial abuse from fans.
Chelsea
and England winger Callum Hudson-Odoi, 18, was subjected to abuse in games
against Dynamo Kiev and Montenegro last month.
"The
moment a match is stopped, or it's not played, I think that 90% of normal
people in the stadium would kick the asses of those idiots," said Ceferin.
"It's
2019, it's not 100 years ago."
Manchester
City and England forward Raheem Sterling suffered alleged racist abuse from
Chelsea fans in a Premier League game at Stamford Bridge in December, while a
study published in November found that half of the football supporters in the
UK have witnessed racism while watching matches.
Sterling
has called on football's authorities to take "a proper stance" and
crack down on racist abuse.
Chelsea
boss Maurizio Sarri, Liverpool's Jurgen Klopp and Tottenham's Mauricio
Pochettino are among the managers to say they would be prepared to take their
players off the pitch to combat racist chanting.
"We
will speak to the referees again, and tell them to be confident, not to be
afraid to act," said Ceferin, the head of European football's governing
body.
"This
is a huge problem. Not just the Balkans, all eastern Europe. There's not much
immigration there because everybody wanted to go to western Europe because of
economic reasons, jobs, a better life.
"So
it takes some time. But of course, you see Italy, one of the biggest problems
with racism, sexism and homophobia. You have England, where you have problems.
"It's
a problem of intolerant people, not a problem of nations."
Anti-discrimination
charity Kick It Out said last week that "it's time for Uefa to take
strong, decisive action - fines won't do", adding: "Extended stadium
bans or tournament expulsion are what's needed."
Ceferin
does not believe Uefa's punishments need to be tougher.
"I
don't see any tougher sanction than forbidding the fans, matches played in
front of empty stadiums, which has happened in Croatia a few times, and the
monetary sanctions," he said.
"If
it's chronic, we could throw out a club team or a national team from a
competition. Everything is possible. But that is the last resort."
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