Twenty Russians including a far-right agitator were to be thrown out of France yesterday as the city of Lens went into lockdown ahead of England’s next Euro 2016 match.
Amid diplomatic tensions over the case, three Russian supporters will also be tried in Marseille, the first from their country to face justice for their role in violence around the England and Russia match in the city on Saturday.
French police swooped on a group of 43 Russian fans in southern France on Tuesday and carried out identity checks as part of the investigation into the soccer violence.
Photo: AP
Far-right figure Alexander Shprygin, who heads a Russian soccer supporters’ association, is among the 20 fans from the detained group who is to be expelled from France.
“He is among the group,” an investigation source said, while the Russian supporters’ association that Shprygin heads also confirmed he was to be expelled.
The other 20 supporters in the group are to be freed.
The arrest of the Russians turned into a diplomatic incident on Wednesday when Moscow summoned France’s ambassador in protest.
Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov described the arrests as “absolutely unacceptable.”
Thousands of riot police were on high alert in Lens, the industrial northern city where up to 50,000 supporters gathered as England prepared to face British rivals Wales.
The atmosphere in Lens was good-natured before kickoff, but schools in the city were closed because of fan trouble fears.
Kevin English, a 53-year-old plumber, was drinking beer and still nursing a bruised and cut eye after a fight with Russian fans in Marseille.
“I was by myself having a drink in the Old Port when a group of Russians came out of nowhere and attacked me. They stamped on me. I have bruises all over my body,” he said.
However, he said that he would not look for confrontation with Russians.
“It’s been and gone. I wouldn’t go looking for revenge,” he said.
Russia has been formally warned by UEFA that they could be thrown out of the competition if their fans cause any more trouble in stadiums. England have also been warned about their fans’ conduct.
The three Russians being tried in Marseille are to face the same violence charges as 10 British, French and Austrian nationals sentenced to prison terms of up to a year on Monday, prosecutor Brice Robin said.
One Frenchman is also to stand trial.
The Russians will face charges over a new offence of “knowingly participating in a group” planning “deliberate violence,” the prosecutor said.
That offence carries a one-year prison sentence and a fine of 15,000 euros (US$16,900).
Meanwhile, the presence of Shprygin among the 20 expelled fans raises fresh questions about Russia’s hosting of the 2018 World Cup.
Shprygin, an aide to nationalist Russian lawmaker Igor Lebedev, was once pictured performing a Nazi salute and has served a jail sentence for extremist links.
He told Russian media last year that he wanted to see “Slavic faces” in the Russian squad.
His boss Lebedev, meanwhile ,praised the Russian fans for the violence in Marseille and told them to “carry on lads.”
French police have made 323 arrests since the start of the violence-marred championship, the French Ministry of the Interior said yesterday.
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