10/21/25 02:26:00
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10/21 02:24 CDT Maccabi Tel Aviv declines tickets for Aston Villa game, citing
safety concerns
Maccabi Tel Aviv declines tickets for Aston Villa game, citing safety concerns
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) --- Maccabi Tel Aviv has announced it will decline any
tickets offered for a Europa League game against Aston Villa next month
regardless of growing calls for the English city of Birmingham to reverse a ban
it imposed on the Israeli club's fans.
West Midlands Police last week deemed the Nov. 6 match at Villa Park to be high
risk and cited violence and hate crimes that took place when Maccabi Tel Aviv
played at Ajax in Amsterdam last season.
The ban subsequently imposed on Maccabi Tel Aviv fans for the Villa game
attracted widespread criticism, including from British Prime Minister Keir
Starmer, who said it was the wrong decision.
In a statement posted on social media late Monday, Maccabi Tel Aviv
acknowledged the efforts to overturn the ban but added: "The wellbeing and
safety of our fans is paramount and from hard lessons learned, we have taken
the decision to decline any allocation offered on behalf of away fans and our
decision should be understood in that context."
Behind the scenes, the British government has been seeking to resolve the row,
which comes at a time of heightened worries about antisemitism in Britain
following a deadly attack on a Manchester synagogue earlier this month and
calls from Palestinians and their supporters for a sports boycott of Israel
over its conduct of the war against Hamas in Gaza.
Football fan bans
Bans for traveling fans are not unheard of in European soccer, but are
typically based on a history of violence between fans of rival clubs. There is
no history of violence between Aston Villa and Maccabi fans.
However, Maccabi fans have been increasingly in the spotlight over the past
year or so, partly linked to the war in Gaza. Most notably, Maccabi fans
clashed violently with city residents in Amsterdam last season when the team
visited for a Europa League game against Ajax.
Dozens were arrested and five people were treated in a hospital following the
night of violence which was condemned as antisemitic by authorities and which
also saw some supporters of the Israeli team chanting anti-Arab slogans.
In Italy last week there was a heavy police presence, including snipers on the
roof of the stadium, for a World Cup qualifier between Italian and Israeli
national teams after authorities placed the game in the highest risk category.
And last Sunday, dozens of people were injured after rioting soccer fans at a
domestic league derby game in Tel Aviv threw flares and smoke grenades. The
game at the Bloomfield Stadium between city rivals Hapoel and Maccabi was
eventually abandoned out of concern for public safety, police said.
The Nov. 6 encounter at Villa Park is set to be Maccabi's first away match in
the Europa League, European soccer's second-tier competition, since
pro-Palestinian protests took place at the stadium in Thessaloniki, Greece,
when the club played PAOK on Sept. 24. About 120 Maccabi fans traveled to
Greece for that game and were held behind a police cordon before entering the
venue.
European soccer's governing body UEFA was weighing a vote to suspend Israeli
teams from its competitions before that was overtaken this month by the
ceasefire in Gaza.
Maccabi reaction
In the club statement, Maccabi Tel Aviv said soccer should bring people
together, not divide them.
"We have been instrumental in bringing forward footballing talent from around
the world irrespective of race or creed. Our first team squad consists of
Muslims, Christian and Jewish players and our fan base also crosses the ethnic
and religious divide," the statement said, adding that the club had been
"working tirelessly to stamp out racism within the more extreme elements of our
fan base."
The statement said there were critics who sought to "malign" Maccabi fans.
"We hope that circumstances will change and look forward to being able to play
in Birmingham in a sporting environment in the near future," the club said.
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