On Uefa
“The panel has concluded that Uefa, as event owner, bears primary responsibility for failures which almost led to disaster.”
The panel found that it was reasonable of Uefa to delegate some security and safety operations to the French Football Federation (FFF), which regularly runs matches at the Stade de France (SDF), and defer to the local Préfecture de Police for policing duties.
“It did not follow that this absolved Uefa of responsibility. Uefa was central to the organisation of the event, and it should have monitored, supervised and assisted with security and safety measures, to ensure they were fit for purpose, and to identify and remedy problems before they arose in real time.”
“Uefa did remain involved throughout, and so it should. However, it did so ineffectually, without taking responsibility and without doing so through the appropriate staff: its own safety and security unit.”
The panel found that Uefa’s safety and security unit was “marginalised” by the Uefa events organisers and did not perform the required role of overseeing the safety requirements. Aleksander Ceferin, Uefa’s president, took the decision to delay kick-off, while standing in a stairwell in the stadium VIP area; it was not taken by the police commander in the control room, in liaison with Uefa and the FFF’s safety advisers, as it should have been.
“The panel has not been able to identify any effective action taken by the safety and security unit … adviser present in the stadium control room on match day, including during the crisis.”
On the police
The policing operation was “defective”, the report states. The police prepared for serious problems of hooliganism, ignoring well-founded information from Merseyside police and clubs that there had been “no significant issues of football-related violence” involving Liverpool or Real Madrid supporters in recent years. The thousands of Liverpool supporters who went to Paris without match tickets did so to enjoy the atmosphere, not seek entry to the stadium in large numbers.
“The police, unchallenged and accepted without question by other stakeholders, adopted a model aimed at a nonexistent threat from football hooligans, together with a preoccupation that ticketless supporters required a public order policing approach rather than one based upon facilities and engagement.”
Police failed to monitor access routes to the stadium and regulate the numbers going to the narrow bottleneck access point; “there was an absence of contingency plans” and no “effective plan to deal with anti-social behaviour or violence perpetrated by locals”.
“Ultimately the failures of this approach culminated in a policing operation that deployed tear gas and pepper spray: weaponry which has no place at a festival of football.”
The “dangerous conditions on the concourse” were exacerbated by the use of teargas and pepper spray. “It is remarkable that no one lost their life.”
The panel stated it had sympathy with the comments of the Liverpool Disabled Supporters Association, that “the heavy-handed approach of the police is a stain on France”.
On the French Football Federation
Uefa delegated many organisational issues to the FFF, including “planning and operating security and safety measures”, and the operation of the turnstiles.
“The panel concludes that FFF failed to establish effective interoperability with multiple partners, including the transport networks, Préfecture de Police, SDF and Uefa.”
The FFF failed to monitor the very large numbers of Liverpool supporters arriving on the train line RER D, and had conceded in a dispute with the police that these fans would be directed to the stadium via a checkpoint on the bottleneck route known to create access problems. It was a “serious failure” not to try to resolve these issues.
“The panel has further concluded that FFF failed to obtain or prepare a venue risk assessment, or to share a proper operational plan with partners, including Uefa.”
The turnstile arrangements were “unable to cope” with the increased pressure after the checkpoint was abandoned at 7.45pm. It was a “significant failure” to have no contingency plan to deal with the congestion at turnstiles, which “leads to an obviously dangerous crush situation”.
“A joint emergency strategy between the police and the stewards was vital to alleviating the dangerous situation outside the turnstiles … The panel has found no evidence of any organised attempt to do so.”
On blaming fans
“As the crisis in Paris unfolded, Uefa announced on big screens within the stadium and thereby via broadcasters to the world, that the delay in kick-off was due to ‘late’-arriving supporters. This claim was objectively untrue.”
“On the night and in the immediate aftermath of the events, French ministers, Uefa and others blamed thousands of supporters at the Liverpool end of the stadium whom they asserted sought to actively enter the stadium without valid tickets … The panel has found that the evidence does not support these assertions.”
Of Uefa’s press release put out immediately after the final: “Firstly, it blamed supporters with fake tickets. Secondly its original draft noted that locals had contributed to the problems. The first assertion was incorrect and should not have been made. The second was correct, but was edited out of the version that was published, at the request of the French authorities.”
The claims that there were huge numbers of supporters without valid tickets were “wrongly inflated” and “stated as fact, to deflect responsibility for the planning and operational failures of stakeholders. This is reprehensible and has involved Uefa, Uefa Events SA, FFF, the Préfecture de Police, government Officials and French ministers.”