THE man Chelsea fans racially abused on the Paris Metro will be at Blues’
Champions League game in the French capital.
Souleymane Sylla was pushed out of a carriage to chants of “we’re racist,
we’re racist, and that’s the way we like it” as Chelsea supporters travelled
to a Paris Saint-Germain clash last year.
Now Mr Sylla has accepted an invitation from PSG to watch the London club’s
Champions League last-16 first leg at Parc des Princes next week.
Chelsea condemned the incident and five men were given football banning orders
of up to five years last July. All received lifetime bans from the club.
Sylla was so traumatised he had to take six months off work and he used the
Metro for the first time since the incident last Friday, February 5.
He declined an invitation from Chelsea to attend the return leg in London in
March 2015, as the ordeal was too raw. The club extended their offer as an
open invitation, which remains in place.
But he plans to go to this season’s last-16 first leg on February 16, one day
short of the anniversary of the incident.
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Sylla’s lawyer Jim Michel-Gabriel said: “Paris Saint-Germain invited my client
to be there and I think he will be there, with me.
“He has decided to go to the match as life must carry on.”
Chelsea’s ticket allocation for the match was reduced by 700 to 1,400 in
response to last November’s terrorist atrocities in Paris, but the Metro
incident, coupled with violence in the French capital surrounding last
season’s fixture, was also a factor.
Sylla’s life was impacted greatly by the incident which occurred as he was
returning home from work and videoed on a mobile phone by a bystander, with
the published footage shocking viewers.
The father of three took six months off work and, after returning, travelled
by car before last week returning to the Metro.
Michel-Gabriel added: “Maybe the supporters of Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain
will think about what happened.
“He feels okay. He goes to the doctor once a week because he thinks about what
happened one year ago.
“It was impossible for him to take the Metro. It was very hard for him.
“He feels better and he started [using the Metro] last Friday.”
Legal proceedings relating to the case are ongoing in France, but Sylla wishes
for a return to some normality.
“The case is still in justice, we don’t know yet when we will go to the
courts,” Michel-Gabriel added.
“He thinks ‘I have to take care of my family and I have to take care of
myself.’”
It is the third year in a row Chelsea and PSG have been drawn together in the
Champions League.
Chelsea won in 2014 on away goals, were defeated in 2015 on away goals and
host the second leg at Stamford Bridge on March 9.