Croatia, Serbia fined for Balkan statements at World Cup
The Croatian and Serbian soccer federations were fined FIFA on Wednesday for making Balkan political statements at the World Cup.
FIFA fined the Croatians 50,000 Swiss francs ($53,000) after the team’s fans verbally abused and taunted Canada goalkeeper Milan Borjan, who has Serbian family ties. The Serbian soccer federation was fined 20,000 Swiss francs ($21,300) for a political banner about neighboring Kosovo displayed in the locker room before playing Brazil in the team’s opening game.
It showed a map of Serbia that included the territory of its former province, which has been an independent state for nearly 15 years, and the slogan “No Surrender.”
The Kosovo soccer federation formally complained to FIFA about the banner, which was hung over two Serbia players’ lockers on Nov. 24. FIFA said the charge against Croatia related to “use of words and objects to transmit a message that is not appropriate for a sports event.”
Borjan was born in an ethnic Serbian region of Croatia. He and his family left their hometown in 1995 when it was taken Croatian forces. The ethnic Serbs are said to have fled on tractors.
During Canada’s 4-1 loss on Nov. 27, one banner displayed Croatia fans used a flag of tractor manufacturer John Deere and changed the marketing slogan to target Borjan. FIFA also fined Saudi Arabia 30,000 Swiss francs ($32,000) for “team misconduct” after getting six yellow cards in games against Argentina and Mexico.