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FOOTBALL

Italy police target balcony match-goers

Police in Frosinone, a town near Rome, have taken measures to try to stop fans from watching football games from the balconies of houses near the stadium following the newly promoted Serie A side's game against AS Roma on Saturday.

Italy police target balcony match-goers
Police have told fans of newly promoted Frosinone to stop watching their team's matches from the balconies of homes overlooking the stadium. Photo: Avi Tm/Flickr

For football-mad Italians who are lucky enough to be living in one of the buildings overlooking the stadium, the occasion of Frosinone's derby match against AS Roma was a good opportunity to invite friends and relatives around to watch it live.

After all, the side are competing in their first ever season in Itay's top flight and the Stadio Mantusa, where Frosinone play their home games, holds just 10,000 people.

But in the eyes of the Police, inviting people around to watch the game poses a threat to public safety.

In a public notice made after the match, the police called attention to the “large presence of people on balconies and in attics overlooking the stadium,” and announced that they would be asking building administrators to prevent so many people entering the residences on match days.

“Such a crowd of fans puts public safety at risk, because it raises the possibility of structural damage and collapse,” said the notice.

This is not the first incidence of Italian football fans going to great lengths to see a game.

In 2006, Juventus, freshly relegated on the back if the Calciopoli match-fixing scandal, made their way to Calabria to face minnows, Crotone.

It was the hottest ticket in town, but Crotone's stadium, the Enzio Scida, only holds 4,000 spectators.

Fortunately, the ground is overlooked by the San Giovanni di Dio hospital. And so for the Juventus game the director of the local health authority decided to allow people to watch the game from the upper floor corridors – and closed the hospital from 3pm on the day of the match.

“After that you'll only be allowed in if it's a serious case,” the hospital's announcement at the time said.

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PROTESTS

Clashes mar rally against far right in north-west France

Riot police clashed with demonstrators in the north-western French city of Rennes on Thursday in the latest rally against the rise of the far-right ahead of a national election this month.

Clashes mar rally against far right in north-west France

The rally ended after dozens of young demonstrators threw bottles and other projectiles at police, who responded with tear gas.

The regional prefecture said seven arrests were made among about 80 people who took positions in front of the march through the city centre.

The rally was called by unions opposed to Marine Le Pen’s far-right Rassemblement National party (RN), which is tipped to make major gains in France’s looming legislative elections. The first round of voting is on June 30.

“We express our absolute opposition to reactionary, racist and anti-Semitic ideas and to those who carry them. There is historically a blood division between them and us,” Fabrice Le Restif, regional head of the FO union, one of the organisers of the rally, told AFP.

Political tensions have been heightened by the rape of a 12-year-old Jewish girl in a Paris suburb, for which two 13-year-old boys have been charged. The RN has been among political parties to condemn the assault.

Several hundred people protested against anti-Semitism and ‘rape culture’ in Paris in the latest reaction.

Dominique Sopo, president of anti-racist group SOS Racisme, said it was “an anti-Semitic crime that chills our blood”.

Hundreds had already protested on Wednesday in Paris and Lyon amid widespread outrage over the assault.

The girl told police three boys aged between 12 and 13 approached her in a park near her home in the Paris suburb of Courbevoie on Saturday, police sources said.

She was dragged into a shed where the suspects beat and raped her, “while uttering death threats and anti-Semitic remarks”, one police source told AFP.

France has the largest Jewish community of any country outside Israel and the United States.

At Thursday’s protest, Arie Alimi, a lawyer known for tackling police brutality and vice-president of the French Human Rights League, said voters had to prevent the far-right from seizing power and “installing a racist, anti-Semitic and sexist policy”.

But he also said he was sad to hear, “anti-Semitic remarks from a part of those who say they are on the left”.

President Emmanuel Macron called the elections after the far-right thrashed his centrist alliance in European Union polls. The far-right and left-wing groups have accused each other of being anti-Semitic.

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