European football

Fenerbahce given partial stadium closure after ‘Putin’ chants for Ukrainian club

Reuters

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Fenerbahce given partial stadium closure after ‘Putin’ chants for Ukrainian club

FILE PHOTO: Fenerbahce fans inside the stadium before the match

Murad Sezer/Reuters

The Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) hands a one-game partial stadium closure - 5,000 seats total - to Fenerbahce after its fans hurled 'Putin' chants to Ukraine-based club Dynamo Kyiv

Fenerbahce has been handed a one-game partial stadium closure, suspended for two years, after its fans chanted Russian President Vladimir Putin’s name in a game against Ukraine-based Dynamo Kyiv, European soccer’s governing body said on Friday, August 5 (Saturday, August 6, Manila time).

The chants of “Vladimir Putin” by some Fenerbahce fans came after Vitaliy Buyalskyi put Kyiv ahead in the 57th minute of the Champions League qualifier that the Ukrainian side won 2-1 last month after extra time thanks to Oleksandr Karavaev’s goal.

Online backlash followed, condemning the Istanbul team’s supporters and calling on the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) to take action against the club.

UEFA’s appeals body fined Fenerbahce 50,000 euros and ordered the partial closure of their Sukru Saracoglu stadium – at least 5,000 seats – for the next UEFA club competition match that they will host.

It said the punishment was for “throwing of objects and transmitting a provocative message of an offensive nature, i.e. illicit chants” and that the partial stadium closure was subject to a “probationary period” of two years.

Fenerbahce previously said that the chants lasted 20 seconds and had been prompted by the “exaggerated” celebrations of some Kyiv players after the goal.

The club’s hopes of competing in Europe’s elite Champions League were dashed by the second qualifying round defeat.

Russia launched a large-scale invasion of Ukraine in February, describing its actions as a “special military operation.” – Rappler.com

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