Italy's interior minister said he would resist pressure from soccer clubs and
not reopen stadiums to the public until he could ensure safety, days after a
police officer died in rioting at a Serie A match in Sicily.
Italian Interior Minister Giuliano
Amato stresses a point during his message at the Lower Chamber of the
Italian Parliament in Rome, Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2007. Amato vowed Tuesday to
resist what he said was pressure from soccer clubs and to ensure safety in
and outside stadiums, days after a police officer died in rioting at a top
match in Sicily. [AP]
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Ensuring public safety "is more
important than economic interests that demand that the show go on as if nothing
happened," Giuliano Amato said Tuesday in parliament.
The rioting Friday at Catania halted all league games last weekend, and
officials have threatened to extend the suspension. A decision on when to resume
play would be made Wednesday, the Italian soccer federation said.
Play could resume this weekend, reports said, but according to emergency
security measures agreed upon by government and soccer officials, many games
might be held behind closed doors in stadiums that don't meet security
requirements.
Club officials from Serie A and B clubs met Tuesday for informal talks in
Rome and said they wanted to resume play this weekend ¡ª with spectators.
"We'd like this closed-doors measure to be eliminated," Palermo President
Maurizio Zamparini said after the meeting.
"We want the government to listen to us," Zamparini added. "We will give all
the guarantees so that order can be ensured, but we can't play behind closed
doors."
Cabinet ministers and soccer officials held an emergency meeting Monday to
outline tough measures in response to Friday's violence at an all-Sicilian match
between Palermo and Catania. The measures include barring soccer fans from
stadiums where security requirements are not met, and barring clubs from selling
blocks of tickets to visiting fans to control who enters the stadium.
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican's No. 2 official, weighed in on the
debate, urging the government to do more. "The measures are right but
insufficient," he was quoted as saying by news agency ANSA.
The measures will be presented for approval at a Cabinet meeting on
Wednesday.
"There's no doubt that from that world (of soccer) pressure will come that
the show must go on, that soccer is a big deal," Amato said in an address to the
Chamber of Deputies. "We have a duty, before our law enforcement officials and
our citizens, to resist these pressures."
Amato's comments appeared to be a response to soccer league president Antonio
Matarrese, whose remarks that soccer should not be halted outraged many.
"We are saddened, but the show must go on," Matarrese told an Italian radio
station, in comments picked up by La Repubblica on Monday. "Unfortunately,
deaths ... are part of this huge movement, which law enforcement officials still
can't control."
Matarrese later said he had been misunderstood and had not intended to sound
as though he was taking the violence lightly. But on Tuesday, some called for
his resignation.
Amato also told lawmakers that 34 people were arrested following the rioting,
including 11 minors. None was believed to be responsible for the death of
38-year-old officer Filippo Raciti, but they were suspected of violence against
public officials and vandalism.
Among those arrested was a stadium custodian accused of letting violent fans
in without tickets, reports said. The custodian's home inside the stadium
complex was reportedly full of clubs and anti-police banners.
Amato said that, between the start of the season in the autumn and January,
the number of police officers injured at soccer matches rose to 228 from 158
from the same span last year. The number of people arrested rose by almost 20 to
136 in the same span.
The minister said that a package of measures put in place by his predecessor
was not properly implemented, and took clubs to task for failing to meet the
security requirements. He said stadiums found ways around implementing the
regulations.
"We are faced with a clear will to avoid these (requirements)," Amato said.
In Italy, stadiums typically belong to cities and are rented out to clubs,
which are often reluctant to invest in security requirements.
According to a report published Monday in Italian sports daily Gazzetta dello
Sport, only four stadiums used by Serie A clubs ¡ª in Rome, Turin, Siena and
Palermo ¡ª satisfy safety norms. Officials were drawing a list of safe stadiums
ahead of Wednesday's meeting.
Milan's San Siro stadium is reportedly not among the group, but AC Milan
vice-president Adriano Galliani expressed confidence that the stadium,
considered one of Europe's finest, would meet all the necessary
requirements.