France Suspends Soccer Chief in Race Row

French soccer was plunged into turmoil on Saturday following the suspension of Francois Blaquart, the national federation’s technical director, over plans to enforce racial quotas at the youth level.

Less than a year after France's World Cup fiasco, the French Sports Ministry and the national soccer federation (FFF) suspended on Saturday its technical director, Francois Blaquart, over plans to allegedly reduce the number of black and Arab players in national training programs.

The alleged plan to enforce racial quotas was first revealed by the French investigative website Mediapart.
The site reported on Thursday that senior staff within the federation approved proposals to limit to 30 percent the number of players of African and North African origin once they reach the age of 13.

Then on Saturday, Mediapart published the minutes of a meeting at which French national team coach Laurent Blanc, Blaquart, U-21 coach Erick Mombaerts and U-20 coach Francis Smerecki, among others, had a debate over African players with dual nationality but groomed in France, who eventually opted to play for their countries of origin.

Countering the accusations, Philippe Touran, the French national team media officer, said the debate was about players with dual nationality and that “causes and effects were being confused.”

National coach Laurent Blanc, who won the 1998 World Cup with a French team dubbed “Blacks, Whites, Arabs by the media, has often raised the issue of dual nationality, but he denied being in favor of quotas.

“No such project has been revealed to me. It's a lie,” he told a press conference in Bordeaux. "You cannot have quotas in football. Football is made of diversity."

Deutsche Welle/agencies

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