A Parisian supporter holds a smoke bomb in his hand - UGO AMEZ / SIPA

Talking about smoke at a time when no supporter can set foot in a stadium is a concept in itself. But we take. In a report examined in Parliament on Wednesday, two deputies call for more flexibility vis-à-vis supporters and ultras. According to the two deputies, the current policy of banning smoke bombs is ineffective (2,000 to 3,000 uses of pyrotechnic devices per season) and "hypocritical".

This fact-finding mission, led by former Sports Minister Marie-George Buffet (PCF) and Sacha Houlié (LREM), was launched several months before the Covid-19 was launched, which shut down several European football championships and forces the leagues to consider the resumption behind closed doors, without tifos or songs from the stands.

Supervise the use of smoke bombs in stadiums

Taking up a flagship claim from supporters' groups, MEPs call for an end to "collective sanctions", such as the closings of the stands decreed by the disciplinary committee of the Professional Football League (LFP), which they consider to be a "serious problem" legal […] by punishing supporters who have committed no fault ”, and have perverse effects.

Thus, faced with the impossibility of preventing the introduction of smoke into stadiums - some devices hide very easily - clubs end up negotiating with their groups of supporters and ultra the number of smoke that they will crack on a match, hoping to only be fined and not in camera.

A smoke zone in the stands?

The two parliamentarians are calling for an experimental phase for "supervised use of pyrotechnic devices", favoring "a dedicated area in the gallery" and "the continuation of studies on so-called" cold "smoke bombs". According to them, the danger of smoke bombs results precisely "from their ban which leads the supporters to light them by hiding, especially under tarpaulins which are not fireproofed".

The two deputies plead for a better dialogue between the authorities and the groups of supporters, to whom they want to give more confidence and responsibilities. Among their proposals, they also ask to "give back to the framing and prohibition orders" for the movement of supporters "their exceptional character" and to better frame the "stadium administrative prohibitions" (IAS), a "useful tool" but overused and misused according to them.

  • Stadium
  • Sport
  • Support
  • Soccer
  • Ultras