Zenit fans release shocking manifesto

Zenit fans release shocking manifesto

Published Dec. 17, 2012 12:00 a.m. ET

Fans of two-time defending Russian champion Zenit St. Petersburg are calling for non-white and gay players to be excluded from the team.

Landscrona, the largest Zenit fan club, released a manifesto Monday demanding the club field an all-white, heterosexual team. It added that ''dark-skinned players are all but forced down Zenit's throat now, which only brings out a negative reaction'' and said gay players were ''unworthy of our great city.''

The club quickly sought to distance itself from the fans. Without directly referring to their manifesto, Zenit's head coach, Luciano Spalletti, said in remarks posted on the club's website that ''tolerance for me is most of all the ability to understand and accept differences.''

''Furthermore, being tolerant means that you fight against any kind of stupidity,'' he added.

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The club, which is owned by state-controlled natural gas giant Gazprom, also told the R-Sport news agency it picked players on athletic ability alone, insisting that ''the team's policy is aimed at development and integration into the world soccer community, and holds no archaic views.''

Zenit were the only top-flight Russian team never to have signed a black player until this summer, when it acquired Brazilian striker Hulk and Belgian midfielder Axel Witsel for 80 million euros ($105 million). French midfielder Yann M'Vila declined a move to the club in August after receiving death threats.

''I can personally assure you that I will do everything I can to help those who seek to explain to people what tolerance is, and the need to respect other cultures and traditions,'' Spalletti said. ''I think that Zenit has proven through its work that the club understands what tolerance is, and what it means to have tolerant behavior. The team has gathered players from different countries and ethnic groups who work together to achieve a common goal, and work well.''

The fan club insisted that ''we are not racists and for us the absence of black Zenit players is just an important tradition that underlines the team's identity and nothing more.''

Russia has struggled to deal with racism and violence at its stadiums as it prepares to host the World Cup in 2018. Black players are frequently the targets of monkey chants and some, including Anzhi Makhachkala's Robert Carlos and Christopher Samba, have had bananas thrown at them by fans.

Officials have at times shown little enthusiasm for targeting racism. When Lokomotiv Moscow fans held up a banner in 2010 thanking an English team for signing their black striker Peter Odemwingie with a picture of a banana, the head of Russia's World Cup bid awkwardly claimed they were referencing a quaint, little-used Russian expression meaning ''to fail an exam.''

Zenit's fans have long been the country's most problematic. Dick Advocaat, the team's former Dutch manager, once admitted that ''the fans don't like black players'' and that it would be ''impossible'' for Zenit to sign one.

Several black players have also singled out Zenit's fans as particularly racist. Former Russian top scorer Vagner Love told a Brazilian newspaper in April that Zenit is ''the most racist team in Russia'' and the only one whose fans had abused him in his seven years playing for CSKA Moscow.

Five years earlier, Krylya Sovetov Samara's former Cameroon international Serge Branco told a local newspaper that Zenit's management were ''the real racists'' for not combatting the problem, adding that ''in a civilized country they'd smack them down to the third division for their fans' behavior.''

Zenit's fans have also come under the spotlight recently after one of them threw a firecracker that injured Dinamo Moscow's goalkeeper during a match in November. Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, himself a Zenit fan, called for violent spectators to be banned for life from attending matches. Parliament has drafted a bill that would ban hooligans for a year.

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