/ 6 September 2019

Inter fans say monkey chants aren’t racist

Fans from Romelu Lukaku's own club
Fans from Romelu Lukaku's own club, Inter Milan have attempted to dismiss the racism he experienced in an open letter, in which they claim that chants such as ‘monkey’ are not racist. (Giuseppe Cacace/AFP)

 

 

A group of hardcore Inter Milan supporters have written an open letter to Romelu Lukaku telling the Belgian striker that fans making monkey noises during a football match was not a sign of racism.

Lukaku — Inter Milan’s new $73-million recruit from Manchester United — was targeted by monkey chants from a section of the home crowd during Sunday’s Serie A game at Cagliari.

The abuse occurred as the 26-year-old was preparing to take the winning penalty in Inter’s 2-1 Serie A triumph at Cagliari.

Inter’s fan group, L’Urlo della Nord, told the forward in an open letter published on its Facebook page that he was seeing racism where there was none.

“Hi Romelu. We are really sorry you thought that what happened in Cagliari was racist,” the fans wrote.

“You have to understand that Italy is not like many other north European countries where racism is a REAL problem.

“We understand that it could have seemed racist to you, but it is not like that,” they continued.

“In Italy we use some ‘ways’ only to ‘help our teams’ and to try to make our opponents nervous, not for racism but to mess them up.

“We are a multi-ethnic fans organisation and we have always welcomed players from everywhere.

“However, we have always used that ‘way’ with other teams’ players in the past and we probably will in the future.

“We are not racist and so are not the Cagliari fans,” continued the letter from the Curva Nord group, which has no official affiliation with Inter. The group is a section of the club’s hardcore support that sit in the north stand of Inter’s San Siro stadium.

On Sunday, monkey sounds could be heard in the stadium as Lukaku was trying to take a penalty.

The Belgian international angrily looked towards the stands before confidently converting his second goal in as many games.

Lukaku was quickly surrounded by his teammates as Inter won their second from two league matches to sit ahead of champions Juventus.

The Sardinian club on Monday moved to “strongly distance” themselves “from the isolated but nevertheless reprehensible events that took place in the Sardegna Arena”.

On Monday, Lukaku called on players, clubs and federations to unite and take a stand.

“Ladies and gentlemen, it’s 2019. Instead of going forward, we’re going backwards, and I think as players we need to unify and make a statement on this matter to keep this game clean and enjoyable for everyone.”

But Inter’s hardcore fans said Lukaku was seeing racism where there was none.

“Please consider this attitude of Italian fans as a form of respect for the fact they are afraid of you for the goals you might score against their teams and not because they hate you or they are racist,” the letter read.

“You have to understand that in all Italian stadiums people cheer for their teams but at the same time they jeer opponents, not for racism, but to ‘help’ their own team.

“True racism is a completely different story and all Italian football fans know it very well.

“When you declare that racism is a problem to be fought in Italy, you just help the repression against all football fans, including us, and you contribute to create a problem that is not really there, not in the way that [it] is perceived in other countries.

“Please help us to clarify what racism really is and that Italian fans are not racist.”

Racist chanting has dogged Italian stadia in recent years, with Italy striker Moise Kean also the victim of similar abuse — alongside teammate Blaise Matuidi — at Cagliari after he scored a goal against the club for his former team, Juventus, last April.

Kalidou Koulibaly was showered with monkey chants last season by Lukaku’s new “fans” at the San Siro, while several other black players have been targeted. — AFP