Italian Soccer club fined but avoids stadium ban for Anne Frank photo

Lazio to pay $61,000 over pictures of Holocaust victim on rival team’s shirt; federation rules it was done with ‘clear anti-Semitic intent’

Stickers of Anne Frank dressed in the uniform of the Roma soccer team were placed in the stadium by rival Lazio fans in Italy (Screenshot/Youtube)
Stickers of Anne Frank dressed in the uniform of the Roma soccer team were placed in the stadium by rival Lazio fans in Italy (Screenshot/Youtube)

ROME, Italy — Lazio has been fined 50,000 euros ($61,000) but avoided a stadium ban over posters created by their fans featuring Holocaust victim Anne Frank, the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) announced on Thursday.

FIGC prosecutor Giuseppe Pecoraro had demanded a fine and for two games to be played behind closed doors after Lazio’s infamous ultra fans fly-posted photographs of Anne Frank on a shirt of bitter city rivals Roma during a game against Cagliari last October.

But the FIGC said in a statement Thursday that its sporting tribunal had decided on a “partial acceptance” of the prosecutor’s requests.

The two Rome clubs share the Stadio Olimpico and Lazio’s ultras were housed in the south end (Curva Sud) of the ground normally reserved for Roma supporters. Their own north end (Curva Nord) had been closed following racist chants during a game against Sassuolo earlier the same month.

The FIGC noted in its report that the stickers featuring the photograph were placed in the south end with “clear anti-Semitic intent, constituting discriminatory behavior.”

But it accepted Lazio’s argument that very few people were involved, the stickers were very small and could not have been detected by club observers, and were only found the day after the game.

“The stickers taken inside the stadium were so small that, even using the utmost diligence, they would have escaped the safety checks which, as correctly observed, don’t include body searches of fans,” the report said.

Lazio players wear a shirt depicting Anne Frank saying ‘No to anti-Semitism,’ in response to anti-Semitic stickers left by their fans at a previous match, during the Serie A match between Bologna FC and SS Lazio at Stadio Renato Dall’Ara in Bologna, Italy, on October 25, 2017. (Marco Rosi/Getty Images via JTA)

Lazio said 13 people were involved, all of whom had been subjected to banning orders.

The FIGC found that the club had “put in place all appropriate measures as required by current regulations, to ensure effective control measures.”

And given the small number of fans involved, it was found that their actions “could not have been prevented.”

The FIGC also opted not to close the stadium, explaining that “in this way almost all of Lazio’s fans would be penalized for the behavior of a few people.”

Thirteen Lazio fans have received stadium bans of between five and eight years in connection with the pictures which provoked an outcry in Italy.

Lazio are flying high in Serie A and opened up a three-point lead over fourth-placed Inter Milan with a 3-0 win over Udinese on Wednesday to boost their push for a Champions League spot next season.

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