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Fury in Germany as UEFA says it wants fans at every Euro match

By Guardian Nigeria
17 March 2021   |   5:41 pm
Plans by European football's governing body UEFA to ensure fans can attend all fixtures at this year's delayed pan-continental Euros has sparked fury in Germany, where Munich is due to host matches.

FILE PHOTO: A logo is pictured outside the UEFA in Nyon, Switzerland, February 28, 2020. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File photo

Plans by European football’s governing body UEFA to ensure fans can attend all fixtures at this year’s delayed pan-continental Euros has sparked fury in Germany, where Munich is due to host matches.

Held over from 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic, the European championships are due to be held in 12 different countries from June 11-July 11, with London’s Wembley hosting the semis and final.

Yet UEFA has warned it could change the venues if a host city insists on holding a match behind closed doors.

“If a city proposes a ‘no fans’ scenario” the matches due to be held there “could” be switched “to cities able to welcome supporters”, UEFA told AFP on Wednesday.

The federation’s president, Aleksander Ceferin, assured Croatian newspaper Sportske Novosti on Sunday the finals would not be “staged in front of empty stands”.

“Every host most guarantee the presence of fans”, he said.

However, Dagmar Freitag, chair of the German parliament’s sports committee, slammed UEFA’s stance given the high levels of Covid-19 across Europe.

“UEFA’s requirement is ignorant and irresponsible in view of the pandemic-related challenges that the 12 host countries still have to face,” Freitag told AFP subsidiary SID.

‘Football’s parallel world’
“It only documents, once again, how far the parallel world of football has distanced itself from the current reality of life in our societies.”

If countries are unable to ease coronavirus restrictions to allow fans into stadiums, the tournament could be reduced to “10 or 11 countries”, Ceferin indicated.

Alongside Munich and London, the other host cities are Amsterdam, Baku, Bilbao, Budapest, Bucharest, Dublin, Glasgow, Copenhagen, Rome and St Petersburg

Each has until April 7 to let UEFA know what their scenarios are in terms of attendance ahead of an executive committee meeting on April 19, on the eve of the federation’s annual congress in Montreux.

The Allianz Arena, home of Bayern Munich, is due to host Germany’s group games against France, Portugal and Hungary plus a quarter-final.

The German Football Association (DFB) said it is looking all scenarios “under the regulations” in the hope fans can attend games in Munich.

Spectators have not been permitted to watch games at the 75,000-capacity ground since March 8 2020.

Dieter Reiter, the Mayor of Munich, said it is impossible to predict if levels of Covid-19 in June could allow fans back into the stadium.

“At this point in time, it is simply not possible to make a statement as to whether or not the situation will allow spectators in June,” Reiter said Wednesday.

“What is clear, however, is that events of this kind with spectators are not permitted under the current regulations,” Reiter added.

The organisers in Munich said Wednesday “it was out of the question” that the Bavarian capital would withdraw as a host city.

According to SID, Ceferin’s comments led to the organisers in Munich calling an emergency meeting Wednesday.

Reiter also took a dig at European football’s governing body.

“Especially in these times, I would like to see those responsible at UEFA seek a direct exchange with the host cities in order to work out a solution together,” he added.

However, UEFA says the multi-venue format, whilst complex, gives organisers flexibility to deal with issues arising from the pandemic.

“If we can no longer do anything in one country there are still 11 others where preparations are already in progress,” UEFA’s health advisor Daniel Koch told AFP at the start of the month.

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