Express Properties

Search Button

The Indian Express

The Financial Express

Latest News

World News

Union Budget

EIW

Market Indicators

Screen

Celebrity Chat

Express Computers

Express Power

Advertisers Forum

Express Careers

Business Forum

Match Maker

Express Properties

Palki - Travel & Tours

Information Technology

Astrosurf

Eco-India

Dr Know

Screen: The Business of Entertainment

Graffiti

Crossword

Drumbeat: Ad Buzzaar


Politics

Business

Expressions

General

World

Sports

Leisure

States

 

Wednesday, June 24, 1998

Eye on the Hooligans

 
The madness continues

  • A French gendarme was fighting for his life late on Monday after a vicious attack blamed on German neo-Nazi hooligans following Sunday's Germany-Yugoslavia match. Pas-de-Calais prefect Daniel Cadoux said the victim, 43-year-old father of two, Daniel Nivel, remained in a coma and could not be operated on for the time being. However, doctors revealed that the gendarme had suffered permanent brain damage.

  • Former German international Uwe Reinders proposed playing a benefit match for the injured French gendarme. Reinders, who played for Werder Bremen before a spell with Bordeaux.

  • German newspapers condemned the brutal attack on a French gendarme by German hooligans in editorials and said the assault proved that hooligans are not indigenous to any one nation. "That a festival for sport is threatening to turn into a battleground for thugs is bad enough," The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung paper said.

  • An English fan was rushed to hospital on Tuesday after beingstabbed in clashes following Romania's 2-1 defeat of England. Three other people suffered slight injuries and police detained 12 others in isolated incidents after the match in Toulose. Eleven of the youths held were French, several of them armed with baseball bats. The other was English.

  • An English journalist was recovering in hospital after being attacked by a gang of English hooligans. Andrew Woodcock, who works for Press Association, was on his way to cover the England-Romania clash when he was attacked. The gang accused him of giving England supporters a bad name and threw him to the ground against a concrete bollard, breaking his collar bone.

  • Four more English hooligans were expelled from France yesterday as part of a new security strategy allowing authorities to pick up known troublemakers without waiting for them to cause problems.

  • British hooligans could face a five-year ban on travelling to matches abroad, under proposals for new laws being considered by London.

    Copyright © 1998 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.


    Top


  • Sardar Sarovar Narmada Nigam Ltd.

    Bank of India

    Astrosurf

     

    India Gift House: Send gifts to over 100 Indian cities


    The Indian Express  |  The Financial Express  |  Latest News
    Screen  |  Express Investment Week  |  Market Indicators  |  Express Computers
    Astrosurf  |  Eco-India  |  Travel & Tourism  |  Information Technology  |  Drumbeat: Ad Buzzaar
    Advertisers Forum  |  Career India  |  Business Forum  |  Match Maker  |  Express Properties