FIFA Getting Tough with Latin Fans and Gay Slurs in Russia's Games






ST.PETERSBURG, Russia  — In a bid to rid the World Cup of gay slurs, FIFA will get tough with Latin American fans in Russia.
FIFA has ordered tighter monitoring of offensive incidents at Confederations Cup matches which kick off Saturday, and wants referees to stop play if fans persist.
FIFA secretary general Fatma Samoura said Friday that curbing problems now is "exactly the whole purpose" of anti-discrimination work at the World Cup rehearsal tournament.
"Fans (must) understand that they will be jeopardizing the game by refusing systematically to respect fair play," Samoura said at a briefing.
Confederations Cup teams Chile and Mexico have been sanctioned by FIFA a combined 17 times for fans' homophobic chants in the current World Cup qualifying program.
Chants aimed at opposing goalkeepers are rife in South and Central America football, though some insist they are simply part of terrace culture.
"It's complicated, because for Mexicans it's not a chant with the intent to offend," midfielder Miguel Layun said after a training session in Kazan, Russia. "It's not about racism, it's a chant that we even use among friends."
A leader of the Mexico fan group "Green Wave" doubted FIFA was serious about intervening.
"We talked among ourselves and the feeling is that the chant won't stop. No one believes they'll really stop the game," Gabriel Galvan told The Associated Press.
Mexico's federation has been fined $120,000 by FIFA in recent months. The Gold Cup winner plays Portugal on Sunday in Kazan.
Chile's football federation has been fined a total of $210,000 and prevented from playing four games at its national stadium in Santiago. The Copa America champion plays Cameroon on Sunday in Moscow.
Samoura said pre-match announcements in the four Confederations Cup stadiums can start a process that allows referees to pause play to broadcast warnings, and ultimately abandon games.
"If sanctions and education do not work then we have to take it further," said the FIFA official, who said it has prepared an anti-racism message from Diego Maradona to be revealed on Saturday.
The process now adopted by FIFA has been used for several years by European football body UEFA. It was highlighted ahead of the 2012 European Championship played in Poland and Ukraine when Italy forward Mario Balotelli, who is black, said he was prepared to walk off the pitch if targeted by fans for abuse.
Russian league matches have also had a problem with racism and far-right fans with 89 incidents reported last season.
"We are grateful to FIFA," Russian deputy prime minister Vitaly Mutko said through a translator on Friday, sitting next to Samoura at a briefing. "With great satisfaction we have welcomed this decision that the system will be strict."
However, Mutko suggested racism in football was no longer a "systematic" problem in Russia.
"We do not see any big problems here," said Mukto, who heads the World Cup organizing committee. "This is a problem that is not purely Russian. It exists everywhere in the world."
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AP Sports Writer Carlos Rodriguez in Kazan, Russia, contributed to this report

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