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Politics

Turkey football salute to be 'examined' by UEFA

John Silk AFP, Italian Ansa news agency
October 13, 2019

European football's governing body has said it will be looking into the celebration of Friday's victory for Turkey against Albania. Football authorities may take a dim view of the "political gesture."

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Turkey's Cenk Tosun celebrates scoring against Albania
Image: Reuters/H. Aldemir

UEFA said Saturday it would examine reports that Turkey's national footballers gave a military salute in support of Ankara's armed offensive against Kurds in Syria.

"Personally, I have not seen this gesture, which could be considered a provocation," UEFA's media head Philip Townsend told the Italian news agency Ansa. "Does the regulation prohibit references to politics and religion? Yes, and I can guarantee you that we will look at this situation," he added.

Read more: Balkan World Cup teams reveal nationalist fault lines

The salute was made after Cenk Tosun's winning goal against Albania in Istanbul on Friday.

After the victory, an additional photo was posted on the Turkish FA's official Twitter account, with the squad posing, saluting the win in the dressing room to "dedicate their victory to our brave soldiers and fellow martyrs."

Rules and previous

Article 16, 2 (e) of UEFA's disciplinary proceedings manual prohibits "the use of gestures, words, objects or any other means to transmit a provocative message that is not fit for a sports event, particularly provocative messages that are of a political, ideological, religious or offensive nature."

During last year's World Cup, world governing body FIFA fined Swiss players Granit Xhaka, Xherdan Shaqiri and Stephan Lichtsteiner for celebrating goals with a pro-Kosovo double eagle gesture, deemed to be flouting the rules as an unnecessary political gesture.

Turkish military action began on Wednesday after US President Donald Trump ordered troops to pull back from the border area of northern Syria.

On Saturday tens of thousands of Kurdish demonstrators marched through Cologne and other German cities against the Turkish cross-border military operation in northeastern Syria. In addition, the German government promised to halt arms exports to Turkey.

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John Silk Editor and writer for English news, as well as the Culture and Asia Desks.@JSilk