Euro 2016: Don’t provoke French officers, British police warn amid new clashes | International | The Independent
11 Giugno 2016A tear gas canister explodes under a football fan as England fans clash with police in Marseille GETTY
independent.co.uk – Euro 2016: Don’t provoke French officers, British police warn amid new clashes. Senior British officers have also arrested seven people who had planned to travel to France, two of whom have already been served with banning orders –
England football fans were involved in violent clashes with French police in Marseille for a second successive night on Friday evening ahead of their first game, against Russia, on Saturday, as British officers warned that there will be a low tolerance threshold for drink-fuelled anti-social behaviour.
Supporters who had been drinking for most of the day at the Queen Victoria pub in the Old Port district of the city threw bottles at French riot police, who used tear gas to disperse them. The officers, who wore full riot gear, were seen marching towards hundreds of England fans who ran away down the street.
Bare-chested England fans sang songs about the IRA and German bombers being shot down and fist fights broke out between English, French and Russian-speaking men. One man was thrown into the harbour after he was beaten to the ground by local fans.
The clashes came after a first night of violence in the southern French city on Thursday. Police with helmets, batons and shields grappled troublemakers to the ground on Friday night amid beer bottles and rubbish strewn across the cobbled streets, ahead of England’s opening game with Russia.
The second night of violence came in spite of British police forcing a notorious English football hooligan who has received widespread coverage in the French media as a potential agitator to surrender his passport in the UK.
James Shayler, 50, the so-called ‘Pig of Marseille’, was located by police who simply knocked on his front door in Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, earlier this week.
Shayler was jailed in France in 1998 and acquired the nickname for his role in provoking violence when England played Tunisia here. But after he was quoted in several British newspapers predicting there would be a repeat of the 1998 violence this weekend, he was arrested and bailed at Northampton Magistrates Court, pending a police application for a banning order. He has had to surrender his passport.
Senior British officers have also arrested seven people who had planned to travel to France, two of whom have already been served with banning orders. Officers are operating at British ports and will stop individuals whose behaviour looks as if it poses a threat to public disorder and send them home, pending work to satisfy courts that they should be served with a banning order.