Seven European World Cup captains ditch OneLove armband following FIFA
pressure
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[November 21, 2022]
By Martyn Herman
DOHA (Reuters) - The captains of England, Wales, Belgium, the
Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany and Denmark will not wear 'OneLove'
armbands at the World Cup under pressure from FIFA, their
associations said in a joint statement on Monday.
FIFA has threatened to issue yellow cards to any player wearing the
multi-coloured armband which was introduced to support diversity and
inclusion.
England captain Harry Kane spoke on Sunday of his desire to wear the
armband in Monday's Group B opener against Iran.
"FIFA has been very clear that it will impose sporting sanctions if
our captains wear the armbands on the field of play," the statement
said, hours before England's match against Iran was due to kick off
in Doha.
"As national federations, we can't put our players in a position
where they could face sporting sanctions including bookings, so we
have asked the captains not to attempt to wear the armbands in FIFA
World Cup games."
The move attracted swift and scathing criticism from groups
representing the LGBT+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender)
community.
"More than disappointing that @FIFAWorldCup and @FIFAcom silence &
deflection means European captains face starting games with yellow
cards for trying to highlight issues around human rights,"
3LionsPride, a group representing England fans, said.
"Their basic rights to freedom of speech & expression being crushed
by FIFA."
England's Football Supporters' Association (FSA) said it felt
contempt for FIFA.
"To paraphrase FIFA president Gianni Infantino -- today LGBT+
football supporters and their allies will feel angry," it said.
"Today we feel betrayed. Today we feel contempt for an organisation
that has shown its true values by giving the yellow card to players
and the red card to tolerance."
The nations' joint statement said they were "very frustrated" by the
FIFA decision which came days after president Gianni Infantino said
"today I feel gay" during a long monologue aimed at media
criticising the decision to host the World Cup in a country where
homosexuality remains illegal.
"We believe (the decision) is unprecedented -- we wrote to FIFA in
September informing them of our wish to wear the One Love armband to
actively support inclusion in football, and had no response," the
statement said.
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Fans take pictures with the FIFA World Cup logo on the Corniche
Promenade ahead of the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 REUTERS/Fabrizio
Bensch
"Our players and coaches are
disappointed -- they are strong supporters of inclusion and will
show support in other ways."
Wales captain Gareth Bale had been planning to wear the OneLove
armband against the United States later on Monday as had Dutch
skipper Virgil van Dijk.
HEAVY HEART
The Dutch FA said it had taken the decision with a heavy heart ahead
of the Netherlands match against Senegal on Monday.
"You don't want the captain to start the match with a yellow card.
That is why it is with a heavy heart that we as a UEFA working group
... and as a team had to decide to abandon our plan," the KNVB said
in a statement.
"This is completely against the
spirit of our sport, which unites millions of people.
"Together with other countries involved we will critically look at
our relation with FIFA."
FIFA launched its own captain's armband campaign ahead of the
tournament to promote different causes for each round.
On Monday it said had brought forward its own "No Discrimination"
from the planned quarter-finals stage in order that all 32 captains
will have the opportunity to wear its own armband during the
tournament.
"This is in line with Article 13.8.1 of the FIFA Equipment
Regulations, which state: 'For FIFA Final Competitions, the captain
of each Team must wear the captain's armband provided by FIFA'," the
world governing body said in a statement.
According to FIFA rules, team equipment must not have any political,
religious or personal slogans, statements or images, and during FIFA
Final Competitions, the captain of each team "must wear the
captain's armband provided by FIFA".
Former England player Stan Collymore said Kane should make a stand
and wear the armband.
"Wear it skipper. Take everything thrown at you. It's about more
than football," he said on Twitter.
England confirmed on Sunday they will take the knee before kickoff,
a ritual they have observed to support equality and anti-racism
messages.
(Reporting by Rohith Nair in Doha and Bart Meijer in Amsterdam,
additional reporting by William Schomberg, Editing by Toby Chopra,
Christian Radnedge and Ed Osmond)
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