Sam Wallace: The Kirkland attack was horrific – but let's keep some perspective



When he reflects on his attack on Chris Kirkland at Hillsborough on 
Friday, the Leeds United fan in question might wonder why he picked the 
night the Sky Sports HD cameras were in town – capable of reading the 
"LUFC" tattoo on his neck, never mind capturing his grinning face. 
Violent, cowardly and thuggish? Undoubtedly, but not exactly the 
Professor Moriarty of football-related crime, is he? And as for his 
fellow pitch invaders, one of them – you will have to refer back to the 
video clip for this one – appears to be, for reasons best known to 
himself, fighting with the goal net.
Kirkland, thankfully, was not seriously injured. As for his assailant, widely 
named in newspapers and on social media there is a good chance he will be given 
a custodial 
sentence. His banning order from football grounds will be so long there 
is even a chance Leeds might be back in the Premier League by the time 
he is permitted legally to watch them in person.#
If he is found guilty of assault, encroachment on the pitch, 
encouraging others to follow him – and the distinct possibility that he 
may have breached an existing banning order – it will be a long rap 
sheet. Gloucestershire police made an arrest yesterday.
It was 
appalling to watch. He deserves to be punished. But what about the 
wisdom of the wider clamour for a crackdown and for the police and the 
courts to get tough with football fans?
The problem with an 
incident as regrettable as the one at Hillsborough is that it often 
provokes a sharp lurch to the right, when it comes to attitudes towards 
football's so-called "problem" and demands more of police and courts. 
Yet the legislation introduced around a decade ago to deter football 
disorder is already draconian and civil liberties groups have asked 
serious questions about the measures' ethical basis.
The football 
banning order (FBO) remains the cornerstone of football policing and the 
Football (Disorder) Act of 2000 means that a fan does not necessarily 
need to have a criminal conviction in order to be served one. The police can 
apply to a court for an FBO on the basis that they have evidence 
that the individual is considered likely to cause disorder around a 
match.
There are around 3,000 FBOs currently in place, of which 
500 are "on complaint", or for those who have not been convicted of an 
offence. FBOs typically include a ban from an exclusion zone around an 
individual's home ground, a ban from all grounds in the country and the 
requirement to surrender one's passport while England are playing 
abroad. FBOs last a minimum of three years.
The concern among 
fans' groups, including the Football Supporters' Federation (FSF), is 
that police are applying for banning orders on relatively low-level 
public order offences. While discretion is used by the police, that 
might include swearing at a ground. Or gesturing at opposing fans. 
Entering a ground drunk can trigger an arrest, and potentially an FBO. 
And before the clubs grab the moral high ground, it should be pointed 
out that they all serve alcohol.
In general, there is little 
sympathy for football supporters or a desire to hear about what they 
regard as maltreatment. One only needs to witness the struggle of the 
families of victims of the 1989 Hillsborough disaster for justice to 
recognise that and Friday's incident at the same ground will not help.
Four years ago, more than 80 Stoke City fans were rounded up by Greater 
Manchester Police (GMP) under Section 27 of the Violent Crime Reduction 
Act– designed to break up drunken groups – and transported back home 
without watching their team play at Old Trafford. They were held for 
four hours, placed on coaches with no toilets and told by police that 
they had to urinate in paper cups. They sued GMP with the help of FSF.
The most recent Home Office statistics for football-related disorder, for 
the 2010-2011 season, reported a total of 3,089 arrests out of an 
estimated total attendance of 37m. That is, as the Home Office itself 
points out, less than 0.01 per cent of all supporters or one arrest for 
every 12,249 tickets sold. It was 9 per cent down on the 2009-2010 
season.
Yet even now, the authorities continue to video innocent 
supporters watching games, a practice that understandably upsets many 
supporters. Police are likely to take your name if you are ejected for 
persistent standing or having a ticket in the wrong section of a ground, even 
though these are not criminal offences.
There has also been 
the introduction of "bubble matches", the term used to describe the 
style of policing for games identified as being at high-risk of 
disorder. Away supporters are given no alternative but to collect their 
tickets at a designated location and be bussed in and out en masse under police 
supervision, as will be the case for the Burnley v Blackburn 
Rovers, the east Lancashire derby, next month.
It should be noted 
that some supporters prefer the peace of mind that "bubble match" 
policing – implemented, for example, for the South Coast derby last year – 
gives them. Others regard it as another liberty removed from the 
well-behaved, blameless football supporter.
Policing itself can 
make a huge difference. Last month, Manchester City supporters following their 
team in Madrid for the Champions League game at the Bernabeu 
reported unprovoked baton charges from Spanish police. Michael Slater, 
the Charlton Athletic chairman and a City fan, was knocked unconscious 
in the attack.
The leading academic research on football disorder 
has found conclusively that the style of policing is fundamental to the 
behaviour of large groups of fans. Dr Geoff Pearson's analysis of 
Portugal's two separate forces policing Euro 2004 in very different ways – and 
getting very different results – demonstrates the benefit of a 
low-key approach that does not legitimise a violent reaction in the 
minds of the crowd.
Unfortunately, the benefits of that research, 
as well as the questions that have been raised about the use of some of 
the legislation against supporters, are ignored when something as 
shocking as Friday night's incident occurs. It would be wrong to say 
that fans have not attacked players before – sadly, they have – but the 
statistics tell us that it is very rare.
What is not in doubt is 
that the punishment for Kirkland's assailant will be more severe for him having 
committed the offence on a football pitch than had he done so on the street. 
Dave Jones, the Sheffield Wednesday manager, called on fans to "police" 
themselves but, given how quickly Kirkland's attacker's 
identity was circulated, that appears to be exactly what happened.
For the vast majority of Leeds fans, and the wider football supporter 
fraternity, appalled by the actions of one of their number, attending 
games is something they do lawfully. Keeping the balance between 
maintaining the peace and people's rights is not easy, and there really 
is no call for the lines to be blurred any further.
_______________________________________________
Leedslist mailing list
Info and options: http://mailman.greennet.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/leedslist
To unsubscribe, email leedslist-unsubscr...@gn.apc.org

PETE CASS (1962 - 2011) Rest In Peace Mate

Reply via email to