The victim of a racist incident involving Chelsea football fans in
the Paris métro earlier this week did not know the scene had been filmed
and has told French daily Le Parisien he will lodge an official
complaint with police.
“I don’t speak a word of English … but it was clear to me they
[Chelsea football fans] were picking on me because of the colour of my
skin,” the victim, identified by Le Parisien as Souleymane, 33, said.
The Paris prosecutor’s office has started an investigation to find
the people responsible for chanting: “We’re racist and that’s the way we
like it” as they pushed Souleymane and prevented him from boarding a
Paris métro train on Tuesday evening.
British Prime Minister David Cameron has since apologised for the shockingly racist action apparently committed by UK nationals.
Chelsea Football Club has also condemned the incident, but the club
itself may still face disciplinary action from The Union of European
Football Associations (UEFA).
The scene was captured on video by British expatriate Paul Nolan,
another passenger on the platform at the Richelieu-Drouot métro station
before English club Chelsea faced Paris St Germain in a Champions League
match at the Parc des Princes in the French capital. Nolan told FRANCE
24 that the rowdy fans were already intimidating passengers and staff
well before the racist incident took place.
“No one really dared to get on the métro. Even the métro staff were
keeping their distance because it looked like a fight could break out at
any point,” he said. “It would have been nice if people had gotten
involved [to help Souleymane] but the Chelsea fans thought they owned
the métro and any provocation probably would have ended in violence.”
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