Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 14 – Given how much
racism there is in Russia and how seldom Moscow seeks to rein it in, holding
the 2016 World Cup in that country would be impossible, according to Jeffrey
Webb, the vice president of FIFA, the international governing board of the
sport.
Webb, who heads the football
association in Latin American countries, expressed the hope that Russia will
change course over the next three years. Otherwise, “as a result of the
problems with racism, the world championship in Russia would become a major
challenge for FIFA (sport.rbc.ru/article/252411/).
This is not the first time FIFA
officials have spoken about the problem of racism in Russia. Joseph Blatter,
the organization’s president, did so last week. And six weeks ago, the Football
Against Racism in Europe organization published a joint report with Moscow’s
SOVA monitoring agency about racism in Russia.
But Webb’s statement is the first
time any senior official in that organization has suggested that FIFA might
move the World Cup competition out of Russia to another country or countries,
and as such, it constitutes a major challenge to Vladimir Putin who has made
that event like the Sochi Olympics a centerpiece of his celebration of Russia’s
return.
Two years ago, FIFA introduced a new
program to struggle against any manifestations of racism among competitors or
fans and specified that any team whose coaches or players “systematically”
displayed racist attitudes toward other players should be disqualified. There have been several such incidents
involving Russian players, and now FIFA appears to be acting.
In his statement last week, Blatter
said that “the problem of racism constantly is on the agenda. Regrettably, we
encounter it in various parts of the globe on a daily basis.”
In the run-up to the Sochi Olympiad,
many activists complained about Russian racism and about Moscow’s decision to
stage a sporting event on the site of an1864 genocide conducted against the
Circassians. But no one in the International Olympic Committee was prepared to
threaten Moscow with a cancellation if Russia did not deal with those
criticisms.
Of course, that was before Putin
invaded Ukraine, seized Crimea, and the international community responded with
sanctions. And it was also before the
manifestations of racism in Russia attracted as much attention as they have in
recent months, the result of official Russian government support for some of the
most noxious nationalists.
If FIFA did cancel the competition
in Russia, that would be a major black eye for a country that cares
passionately about football and plans to hold the contests in 12 stadiums in 11
cities. But because of that passion and
of concerns about face, its threat to do so puts far more pressure on Putin and
on those around him to change course than any sanctions to date.
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