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German TV combats insults to World Cup commentator

June 30, 2018

Claudia Neumann made history during the World Cup as the first German woman to commentate live on the men's matches. After receiving "extremely derogatory remarks" online, public broadcaster ZDF is taking legal action.

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Claudia Neumann
Image: picture-alliance/AP/ZDF/S. Hoever

In an effort to combat insults against World Cup commentator Claudia Neumann, German public broadcaster ZDF said on Friday that it filed a criminal complaint against two social media users.

The two individuals "made extremely derogatory remarks against Claudia Neumann and ZDF," the broadcaster's director, Thomas Bellut, said in a statement on ZDF's website.

The complaint concerns "libel and the public provocation to commit a criminal offense," the broadcaster said without elaborating further on the comments in question.

"Apparently there are still some viewers who have a problem with a woman commentating on football," Bellut said.

Neumann is the first German woman to narrate the men's World Cup soccer matches on German public television. 

ZDF's World Cup 2018 commentators pose for a picture, from left to right: Oliver Schmidt, Bela Rethy, Claudia Neumann, Martin Schneider
Image: picture-alliance/S. Simon

Red card for 'verbal abuse'

In its statement, ZDF said it valued Neumann's experience, noting: "The fact that she also makes mistakes, like confusing a Japanese player, is also part of the job for male colleagues."

The broadcaster's sports director, Thomas Fuhrmann, said in the statement that "Claudia is doing a good job overall and what we will absolutely not accept is hate, insults and sexist remarks."

The German Olympic and Sports Confederation and the German Association of Women Journalists had previously also come out in support of Neumann, saying in a statement that they were showing a "red card to hostilities and verbal abuse."

Neumann has worked for ZDF since 1999 and broke ground by becoming the first female football commentator on German TV when she was tapped to cover the FIFA Women's World Cup in 2011.

She went on to become the first woman to report a men's football game in 2016, during the UEFA Euro tournament in France.

Her broadcast sparked a flood of sexist hate speech as well as threats on social media at the time from German sports fans who protested a women narrating men's matches.

A poll by the news magazine Der Spiegel found that a majority of Germans widely support having a woman narrating the games.

rs/sms (AFP, SID)

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