Nearly 500 arrested in weekend scuffles (Reuters) Updated: 2006-06-26 23:31
British and German police were helped by heavy rain that had most fans
running for someplace dry after a weekend that saw hundreds of arrests.
Fears that the fan violence that gripped Stuttgart the previous day would be
repeated on Sunday were erased by England's 1-0 win against Ecuador and the
driving rain.
Police spokesman Olaf Petersen said nine fans were arrested for minor
offenses on Sunday. That paled compared with Saturday when police arrested 400
English, as well as 14 Germans, following a clash between fans from the two
countries.
All but three were released Sunday morning, in part because of a lack of
detention space, police spokesman Stephan Keilbach said.
The fans were banned from the downtown area until Monday morning, though
Keilbach said police would only know of violations if the fans caused more
problems. All those arrested and released had been photographed, but Keilbach
said it was impractical to hand out so many pictures to all the officers on
patrol.
The arrests followed a clash with police earlier Saturday during which 122
English were arrested. Of those, 117 were kept in custody until after the match.
They were released on Monday.
In the free open-air viewing area Sunday, middle-aged couples and families
with children _ some carrying the German flag _ mingled with fans clad in flags
or walking around shirtless to bare patriotic tattoos.
"It's a party. We're here to have fun," whooped Kevin Penfold as he swapped
his red England shirt for an Ecuadorean one worn by Ana Cecilia Pinos Flores,
who struggled to put on her sweat-soaked acquisition.
Nearby, an English fan with his chest hairs dyed ginger and shaved in the
shape of a cross grinned benignly in an alcoholic daze as his friends covered
him in a flag. Others bellowed songs about downing German bombers in World War
II.
Nearly 2,000 police officers patrolled this normally pristine southern city,
a force boosted by hooligan experts from England. It was a model of cooperation
that so far this World Cup has helped prevent widespread trouble.
|