Italian soccer officials investigate antisemitic chants by Lazio fans

Team condemns ‘antisemitism and racism which happen in almost every match at every stadium in Italy’; Mussolini’s great-grandson plays for club

A giant banner unfurled by Lazio fans, reading 'my love will not die' is displayed in a tribune prior to the Italian Serie A football match between AS Rome and Lazio on November 6, 2022 at the Olympic stadium in Rome. (Tiziana FABI / AFP)
A giant banner unfurled by Lazio fans, reading 'my love will not die' is displayed in a tribune prior to the Italian Serie A football match between AS Rome and Lazio on November 6, 2022 at the Olympic stadium in Rome. (Tiziana FABI / AFP)

MILAN — Italian soccer authorities are investigating alleged antisemitic chanting from Lazio fans during the weekend’s Rome derby, Serie A announced on Tuesday.

In a statement, Italy’s top division said that a “follow-up investigation” would be carried out to verify the number of supporters making the offensive chants, videos of which circulated on social media after Lazio’s 1-0 win over Roma on Sunday.

Serie A said the “boorish, outrageous and religiously discriminatory” chants were aimed at Roma fans “several times before the match and once during the game itself.”

On Monday Lazio condemned “expressions of antisemitism and racism which happen in almost every match at every stadium in Italy.”

“They’re not part of our culture and don’t represent our fans,” the club added in a statement.

Fascist fan groups are common across Italy, including at Roma, but Lazio’s hardcore supporters have a connection to the extreme right that stretches back to at least the 1970s.

Illustrative — Lazio’s fan cheer before the start of a Serie A soccer match between Roma and Lazio at Rome’s Olympic stadium, March 20, 2022. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Lazio’s historic ultras group, the Irriducibili, had friendly relations with its equally right-wing counterparts at Inter Milan and Verona.

Last season the handler of Lazio’s eagle mascot praised dictators Benito Mussolini and Francisco Franco after being suspended by the club for performing a fascist salute at the end of a game.

Mussolini’s great-grandson Romano Floriani plays for Lazio, although he is yet to feature in a first-team match and claims to have no interest in politics.

The 19-year-old’s mother is former right-wing politician Alessandra Mussolini, who was once a member of neo-Fascist party Italian Social Movement.

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