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Police officers stand guard near the Stade de France PA

'We need to be present in the public space': Security amped up for France v Israel match

Last week violence erupted in Amsterdam in connection with an Israeli club’s visit.

A HEAVY POLICE presence but few visiting fans are expected when France hosts Israel in a Nations League football match tonight, a week after violence erupted in Amsterdam in connection with an Israeli club’s visit.

French police chief Laurent Nunez said 4,000 officers and security staff will be deployed around the Stade de France, with another 1,500 police on public transport.

Paris authorities are on high alert following the violence in Amsterdam before and after a Europa League match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel Aviv.

Dutch authorities say fans from both sides were involved in the unrest. The assaults on Maccabi fans sparked outrage and were widely condemned as antisemitic.

“What we learned from Amsterdam is that we need to be present in the public space including far away from the stadium,” and on public transport before and after the match, Nunez said.

Three months after hosting the Olympic closing ceremony, the atmosphere has gone from festive to fearful and the national stadium was expected to be three-quarters empty for the match.

French President Emmanuel Macron and French interior minister Bruno Retailleau will be present. Former presidents Francois Hollande and Nicolas Sarkozy are also to attend.

Only 20,000 of 80,000 tickets have been sold with around 150 Israel supporters reportedly attending, escorted by police.

“We’ve tried to prepare for this match as normally as possible. But obviously none of us within the team can be insensitive to such a heavy context,” France coach Didier Deschamps said on Wednesday. “It impacts the amount of supporters present tomorrow and everything that goes with it.”

The away match against Israel on 10 October — which France won 4-1 — was played in Budapest, Hungary.

“These are situations the players are not accustomed to,” Deschamps said. “But we have to adapt.”

The low number of visiting fans comes after Israel’s National Security Council warned citizens abroad to avoid sports and cultural events, specifically the match in Paris.

Retailleau told French news channel TF1 on Tuesday that no specific threats were identified but “zero risk does not exist”.

Therefore, he said, exceptional measures are in place “before the match, during the match and after the match”.

The elite tactical unit of the French National Police, known as RAID, will be in the stadium and some police will be in plain clothes mingling with fans. There will also be heavy surveillance within Paris, including at Jewish places of worship and schools.

“It is out of the question that we take the risk of seeing a repeat of the dramatic events, of the manhunt, that we saw in Amsterdam,” Retailleau said, adding that postponing or moving the game elsewhere was ruled out.

“France does not submit, and the France-Israel match will take place where it’s supposed to,” he said.

In Amsterdam, a number of Maccabi fans attacked a cab and chanted anti-Arab slogans while some men carried out “hit and run” attacks on people they thought were Jews, according to Mayor Femke Halsema.

After the match, parts of a large group of Maccabi supporters armed with sticks ran around “destroying things”, a 12-page report on the violence issued by Amsterdam authorities said.

There were also “rioters, moving in small groups, by foot, scooter or car, quickly attacking Maccabi fans before disappearing”, it said.

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