Fears of excesses were reinforced after the serious incidents which followed the Europa League match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel-Aviv, on the night of November 7 to 8 in Amsterdam. Israeli fans were chased and beaten in the streets of the Dutch capital, attacks that left 20 to 30 injured and sparked outrage in many Western capitals. Maccabi fans also stood out before the game by singing anti-Arab chants and burning a Palestinian flag in the central Dam Square.
But there is no question for the French authorities of giving up on organizing the match. The day after the events in Amsterdam, the Minister of the Interior Bruno Retailleau ruled out this possibility, taking the opposite view of Belgium which had refused to welcome Israel on September 6 in Brussels, and had decided to confront his opponent in Debrecen in Hungary. “Some are calling for the France-Israel match to be relocated. I do not accept it: France is not backing down because that would amount to abdicating in the face of threats of violence and anti-Semitism,” he wrote on X on Friday.
4,000 law enforcement officers mobilized
A total of 4,000 police officers and gendarmes will be deployed around and, rarely, in the stadium, as well as on public transport and throughout Paris. Around 1,600 security agents will also be mobilized at the Stade de France and the Raid, the elite unit of the national police, is committed to the security of the Israel team, locked in a bubble since its arrival in France Monday. “It will be zero tolerance,” police chief Laurent Nuñez promised on RTL radio on Wednesday, specifying that only the French and Israeli flags will be allowed in the stadium. Palestinian banners, as well as “messages of a political nature” will be banned, he said.
Israel, however, called on its supporters on Sunday to avoid going to the Stade de France on Thursday. The venue of Saint-Denis, in the Paris suburbs, will ring particularly hollow in any case since only 12,000 to 25,000 spectators are expected. We are therefore heading towards the lowest attendance in the history of this stadium (36,842 spectators for France-New Zealand in 2003).
A well-filled grandstand
The President of the Republic Emmanuel Macron will be there, to “send a message of fraternity and solidarity after the intolerable anti-Semitic acts which followed the match in Amsterdam”, according to his entourage. His two predecessors, Nicolas Sarkozy and François Hollande, as well as Prime Minister Michel Barnier will also be present, according to several media.
On the field, the Blues of Didier Deschamps, deprived for the second month in a row of their captain and superstar Kylian Mbappé, will try to get their ticket to the quarter-finals of the League of Nations. Second in their group, they only need a draw to qualify.
Even without Mbappé, the task should not be insurmountable, a month after an easy success against the same Israelis in Budapest (4-1). Beyond the security aspect, the shadow of the attacker, who accumulates setbacks (failed Euro 2024, financial conflict with PSG, laborious integration into Real Madrid, accusations of rape emanating from the Swedish press), will inevitably loom in Saint-Denis. In October, Mbappé’s defection did not have too much impact on the performance of the vice-world champions, victorious over Israel and Belgium in Brussels (2-1).
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