17 June 2016/By Edwin84.
The French ambassador to Moscow has been summoned to
the Russian foreign ministry after sharp criticism of policing at the Euro 2016
tournament.
"Further stoking
of anti-Russian sentiments... could significantly aggravate the atmosphere in
Russian-French relations," the ministry said.
Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov rebuked French police for detaining 43 Russian fans after clashes
in Marseille.
Separately, France is
to expel four Russians arrested in Lille.France's crackdown on hooliganism
among supporters relates to incidents outside the stadiums.
Uefa, football's
European governing body, separately fined Russia and gave it a suspended
disqualification following fan
violence inside the stadium in Marseille where Russia played England on
Saturday.The
Russian foreign ministry summoned Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert soon after a
speech by Mr Lavrov to the lower house of the Russian parliament in Moscow.
Mr
Lavrov suggested Russian fans had been provoked and criticised the way French
police were subjecting them to security checks.Media
captionA French prosecutor says there were around 150 Russian
"hooligans" who travelled to Marseille "well-prepared for
violence"
"It
was an absolutely unacceptable incident when a bus with more than 40 Russian
supporters was stopped and [the police] demanded that they leave the bus for
document and ID checks," he told the State Duma.
He
accused the French of violating international conventions by detaining the
fans."It is a fact that the French behaved completely contrary to their
obligations under the Vienna Convention, and I have already written to the
French foreign minister, demanding that he does not allow any more such
incidents to occur."
Mr
Lavrov did concede that the behaviour of some Russian fans at the tournament
had been poor.
"Behaving
like some of our citizens did, bringing flares, fireworks and so on, is
unacceptable."
"However..."
he added, "we cannot close our eyes to the attempts to ignore the
provocative actions of other countries' fans".
French
police blamed 150 "well-trained" Russian hooligans for clashes before England played Russia.The bus carrying 43 fans was stopped in a police operation near Cannes on Tuesday, and some of those Russia supporters are now being deported.
Among
them was far-right sympathiser Alexander Shprygin, who heads a Russian football
supporters' association.
Five
England fans were jailed for throwing bottles at police and a sixth jailed in
connection with the violence.
Russia
Defeat.
There
was no significant crowd trouble inside the stadium, although a flare was
ignited by Russia fans just after their team had scored.
Lille
is also being used as a base by supporters of England and Wales, who are due to
play in nearby Lens on Thursday.
There
are reports
of tear gas being fired in Lille on Wednesday afternoon after brief clashes
between fans and police, but it is unclear which fans were involved.
The
authorities in Lille announced that four Russians would be expelled, two for a
scuffle near a railway station, and two who had been found with a baseball bat
and a hammer in their car during a vehicle check.
Three
other Russians were detained on Wednesday morning, it added.
The
French authorities have pledged to increase security in Lens, deploying 2,400
police, gendarmes, security guards and a riot squad.Drinking alcohol in the
streets has also been banned.
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