
Russians to need government issued ID cards to buy tickets
By The Associated Press
News Industry NewsMOSCOW — Russian soccer fans will need government-issued ID cards next season to buy tickets for league games.
Modeled on the “Fan ID” scheme used at last year’s World Cup, the sports ministry said Tuesday that from July 1 fans would need to pass a security check before being allowed to buy tickets.
In comments reported by the Tass state news agency, ministry official Irina Grigoryeva said she hopes “these measures will allow us to increase public safety and public order (at games).”
Similar systems in countries like Italy, which introduced an ID system for away fans in league games in 2009 to combat hooliganism, have been blamed for driving away spectators. However, Grigoryeva said the new system in Russia would likely attract more fans “who previously avoided these events because of potential risks.”
Without the ID system, average attendances since the World Cup have risen 21 per cent to 16,898 in the Russian league this season.
While Russian hooligans caused havoc at the 2016 European Championship, fights at Russian league games have been rare in recent years, though racist abuse remains a problem.
The World Cup ID system kept out some convicted hooligans but was criticized by some Russian fans for being opaque and unaccountable. Violence at the tournament was rare.
However, fan representatives said thousands had been refused IDs for the World Cup with little explanation and no way to appeal in time for the tournament. The number of those refused was far larger than Russia’s official database of hooligans banned from games, and some fans said they had been barred for decades-old convictions for minor offences such as jaywalking.
The World Cup IDs doubled as Russian visas and allowed fans free travel on many buses and trains. There was no word on whether Russian fans would get similar benefits in the future.
News from © Canadian Press Enterprises Inc. 2019
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