PRESS RELEASE
“Treated with Contempt": An Independent Panel Report into Fans' Experiences Before, During and After the 2022 Champions League Final in Paris'
It is EMBARGOED until 00.01 Monday 17 October 2022, then available:
https://law.qub.ac.uk/schools/SchoolofLaw/filestore/Filetoupload,1530449,en.pdf An independent panel report, based on the written testimonies of 485 women, men and children, and eyewitness accounts by international journalists, tells the story of those who survived extreme violence at the hands of the police and local gangs before and after the European Champions League Final in Paris, May 2022.
Compiled by five leading authorities in their respective fields, including primary author of the ground-breaking report into the Hillsborough disaster, Professor Emeritus Phil Scraton from the School of Law at Queen’s University Belfast, the report, “Treated with Contempt": An Independent Panel Report into Fans' Experiences Before, During and After the 2022 Champions League Final in Paris', details survivors’ written evidence submitted in the days after the event.
The report’s authors state: “Held for several hours in a bottleneck close to the ground, then again in static queues at malfunctioning turnstiles, fans were subjected to unprovoked tear-gassing by the paramilitary police. On leaving the stadium they were attacked at knife-point by gangs who stole their possessions. They were tear-gassed repeatedly by the police.
“Without protection, many who had paid significant amounts of money for match tickets, travel and accommodation did not enter the stadium. Fortuitously, no-one died but those injured missed their travel home. Thousands, including children, have been left traumatised.”
The report’s 53 findings focus on: pre-match preparation by UEFA and the Paris agencies; policing – before, during and after the match; crowd safety and event management; fans’ experiences; and UEFA’s role and responsibilities.
Speaking about the findings, Professor Scraton said: “It is difficult to comprehend the sequence of events that constituted the debacle in Paris, leaving so many people physically injured, psychologically harmed and financially compromised. Having paid inflated prices for travel, accommodation and attendance, men, women and children were subjected to unprovoked, indiscriminate police violence including tear gas and baton assaults, together with robbery at knife-point by local gangs. Many left before the match, those who stayed were subjected to further attacks by riot police and gangs on leaving the stadium and arriving at local stations.
“Responsibility for the collapse in authority, management and safety, lies with those organising and administering the event.”
Some of the key findings include:
• Inadequate pre-match preparation by UEFA and the Paris agencies;
• Aggressive policing – before, during and after the match;
• Inadequate provision for crowd safety and event management;
• Fans’ left traumatised by unprovoked assaults by the police and local gangs;
• Abject failure by UEFA in meeting its responsibilities.
The Research Team states:
“Our comprehensive analysis of fans' experiences before, during and after the Champions League Final is an indictment of all authorities involved: UEFA; the Paris police; local and central government; and the stadium owners. These stark and painful testimonies, particularly those concerning children, families, the elderly and those with disabilities, reveal the cumulative, long-lasting impact on them individually and collectively. For those fans who survived the 1989 Hillsborough disaster and all that followed, Paris was retraumatising,” said Dr Deena Haydon, independent researcher and writer.
Dr Lucy Easthope, Professor in Practice of Risk and Hazard at the University of Durham commented: “Fans’ statements raise substantial concerns about whether UEFA and the French authorities have learned from previous events. Their safety was compromised, not least by indiscriminate, reckless and unprovoked police use of tear gas. Lives were put at risk by a collective, operational failure to implement a comprehensive stadium safety management plan that should have been regularly tested, risk assessed and refined. Detailing the experiences of those who were there, this report provides the foundation to developing a comprehensive approach to stadium safety, event management and attendees’ welfare.”
“Collectively and consistently, fans' testimonies demonstrate the shocking treatment they suffered before and after the match, particularly at the hands of those who should have ensured their safety. Already evident is the longer-term impact on their physical health and psychological well-being. The consequences of events on and after 28th May 2022 will have personal and professional ramifications for a long time to come,” said Dr Patricia Canning, Assistant Professor in the Department of Humanities at Northumbria University.
Journalist and broadcaster Peter Marshall added: “Only the forbearance of the fans averted catastrophe. It truly is a miracle no one died. UEFA, who organise these events and supposedly vet stadium safety and security, must explain how they allowed this to happen - and why, in the face of the evidence, they persisted in blaming innocent supporters. UEFA officials must face up to their individual and collective responsibility.”
Professor Phil Scraton will feature on BBC Panorama’s ‘The Champions League Final: What went Wrong?’ on Monday 17 October at 8.00pm on BBC One.
Media enquiries to Zara McBrearty at Queen’s Communications Office on email: z.mcbrearty@qub.ac.uk or Mob: 07795676858
The Independent Panel:
Professor Phil Scraton PhD is Professor Emeritus, School of Law, Queen’s University Belfast. Widely published, his books include Hillsborough The Truth (Penguin/ Random House, 2016). He led the Hillsborough Independent Panel’s research team and was principal author of its Report, Hillsborough (HMSO, 2016). Seconded to the families’ legal teams throughout the 2014-2016 inquests, in 2016 he was consultant on, and contributor to, the 2017 BAFTA winning ESPN/BBC documentary Hillsborough, He holds a Leverhulme Fellowship addressing the unique work of the Panel and the legal processes that followed. Most recently he has edited ‘The Report of the Independent Panel of Inquiry into the Circumstances of the H-Block and Armagh Prison Protests 1976-1981, is co-author of ‘Deaths in Contested Circumstances and Coroners’ Inquests’ (ICCL, 2021) and Truth, Acknowledgement and Accountability: Mother and Baby Institutions, Magdalene Laundries and Workhouses (NI Executive). He was awarded the Freedom of the City of Liverpool in recognition of his Hillsborough research.
Dr Deena Haydon is an independent researcher and writer whose research and publications focus on childhood, children’s rights, parenting and family support, youth justice, and the needs of vulnerable groups. Previously a University Senior Lecturer in Education, she has co-authored books and written journal articles, book chapters, research reports and resources for children and practitioners. On behalf of the NGO sector in Northern Ireland she has researched and authored submissions to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child. She has presented workshops and conference papers for academics, practitioners and public audiences in the UK, Europe, the US, Australia and New Zealand.
Dr Lucy Easthope is Professor in Practice of Risk and Hazard at the University of Durham and a co-founder of the After Disaster Network based in their Institute of Hazard, Risk and Resilience. She is Fellow in Mass Fatalities and Pandemics at the Centre for Death and Society, University of Bath and a Research Associate at the Joint Centre for Disaster Research, Massey University, New Zealand. She has developed contingency plans, training programmes and exercises with organisations including government bodies, charities, airports and airlines, universities and emergency services. Her book, When The Dust Settles Stories of Love, Loss and Hope from an Expert in Disaster (2002) is a Sunday Times Bestseller. Fellow of the Royal Anthropological Institute and the Higher Education Academy, she was awarded a fellowship to the Emergency Planning Society in 2018.
Dr Patricia Canning is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Humanities at Northumbria University in Northeast England. She is an applied linguist specializing in forensic texts and contexts. Her work includes the investigation and analysis of police reporting, particularly the attribution and deflection of blame through individual and institutional language choices. She has published research on analyses of the witness statements following the Hillsborough Disaster.
Peter Marshall is a journalist and broadcaster. He has reported from five continents, focusing on political and investigative stories and documentary films. He was a correspondent with the BBC for 35 years, reporting primarily for Newsnight, Panorama and Radio Four. He is now freelance. He presented Hillsborough: How They Buried The Truth for the BBC and Hillsborough: Smears, Survivors And The Search For Truth for ITV. He is a Liverpool supporter and was at Hillsborough in 1989 and the Stade de France in 2022.