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Serbia volleyball player banned: Now a racist 'eye gesture’

11 Jun 2021

      [caption id="attachment_142115" align="alignleft" width="421"] Sanja Djurdjevic will miss her team’s next two games[/caption]

A Serbian volleyball player has been banned for two matches after making a racist gesture during a game against Thailand last week.

The BBC reported yesterday (9) that Sanja Djurdjevic was pictured on camera narrowing her eyes with her fingers, causing outrage from fans online.

The player has since apologised along with the Volleyball Federation of Serbia, who described the incident as a “simple misunderstanding”.

The federation has also been fined $ 22,392 (Rs. 4.4 million), the report further added.

Thousands sign a petition

The money will be donated to “a cause tackling discriminatory behaviour and/or to fund educational programmes on cultural sensitivity for the global Volleyball Family,” the International Volleyball Federation (FIVB) announced on Tuesday.

Djurdjevic will miss her team’s upcoming matches against Belgium and Canada.

She made the gesture during a match in Italy on 1 June, prompting thousands to sign a petition calling for her to be disciplined for her actions.

Unfortunate gesture

[caption id="attachment_142116" align="alignleft" width="300"] TV footage showing Djurdjevic making the alleged ‘racist eye gesture’[/caption]

According to Vice, Djurdjevic apologised in a series of posts on her Instagram account before it was set to private.

The Volleyball Federation of Serbia also published an apology, saying that it was “saddened by the recent events” and “the unfortunate gesture”.

“We apologise sincerely to the Thailand team, people of Thailand, and to all of you affected by this,” the federation wrote on Facebook.

No disrespect

“Please don’t blow this out of proportion! Sanja is aware of her mistake and she immediately apologised to the whole Thailand team. She only wanted to show her team-mates ‘let’s start playing defence like them now’, she didn't mean any disrespect. Of course, it was unfortunate.”

The incident comes amid a rise in anti-Asian rhetoric and attacks on Asian people since the coronavirus pandemic began last year.

In the US, advocacy group Stop AAPI said it had received more than 2,800 reports of hate incidents directed at Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders nationwide last year.


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