Lazio fans ‘make Nazi salutes and fascists chants’ moments after players’ Anne Frank tribute — while Juventus group defends act
Italian football has become embroiled in anti-Semitism row but it shows no signs of subsiding
LAZIO fans plunged their club into even further shame with fascist chanting and alleged Nazi salutes — only moments after their players had shown solidarity in the face of recent anti-Semitic acts.
The Biancocelesti were in action against Bologna in their first outing since a section of the club's fans stoked national outrage by leaving images of Anne Frank in a Roma shirt in their rivals' part of the shared Olympic Stadium when their end was temporarily shut.
The incident prompted a swift reaction, with Lazio's president Claudio Lotito pledging to send 200 fans to visit Auschwitz every year.
All clubs' players wore T-shirts bearing Anne Frank's face and the phrase "No to antisemitism" during the warm-up, while her diary was handed out to mascots before kick-off.
And a minute's reflection was held at all grounds during the midweek Serie A fixtures.
However, several Lazio ultras boycotted the start of the match when players wore the T-shirts, and claim several made Nazi salutes when they finally did arrive.
While they also chanted "Me ne frego" [I don't care], which is a known fascist song.
To add insult to serious injury, they were seated in a part of the ground named after former Inter Milan and Bologna coach Arpad Weisz, who died in Auschwitz in 1944.
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Before the match, Lotito had laid a wreath outside a synagogue in Rome, but it was mysteriously later found in the river Tiber.
The scandal shows no sign of subsiding with several groups of Lazio supporters reportedly refusing to apologise for the act and describing it as "banter".
Meanwhile, Lotito has not helped himself by repeatedly dropping clangers in his attempts to rectify the situation.
He was caught on tape calling an organised visit to a synagogue a "charade" and in a later TV interview, he told reporters he had visited a mosque — confusing a Muslim place of worship with a Jewish one.
But it isn't just Lazio fans who are engulfed in the anti-Semitism row, with a Juventus supporters' group also defending the act.