Manchester United's Marcus Rashford was racially abused after missing a penalty (Photo | AP) 
Football

Footballers in England want racist social media accounts deleted

The Professional Footballers' Association met with Twitter, Facebook and Instagram after many of its members staged a 24-hour social media boycott in April as part a campaign called "Enough."

From our online archive

LONDON: Football players in England are asking social media companies to permanently delete accounts after a single racist post and commit greater resources to identifying abuse.

The Professional Footballers' Association met with Twitter, Facebook and Instagram after many of its members staged a 24-hour social media boycott in April as part a campaign called "Enough."

But the opening month of the Premier League season has seen black players subjected to racial abuse, including Marcus Rashford after missing a penalty for Manchester United, and the PFA wants tougher action from the social networks.

The PFA told The Associated Press it wants "sufficient resources dedicated to identifying and removing offending posts without delay."

Twitter said Wednesday that in the last two weeks it had "taken action on more than 700 examples of abuse and hateful conduct related to UK football."

That action wasn't specified and the players want more transparency. The PFA is demanding players are informed "the offending account has been permanently suspended."

Twitter declined to directly comment on the PFA's requests.

Hindu man stabbed, set on fire in Bangladesh, escapes by jumping into pond; fourth attack in two weeks

Did candle held close to wooden ceiling spark blaze? Swiss ski resort town reels as dozens feared dead

RBI says economy resilient, banks stronger but warns of rising risks from unsecured loans, stablecoins

Four arrested at Indo-Nepal border in Bihar for illegal entry, fake currency recovered

Drop in terror attacks in Pakistan since Afghan border closure, 2025 most violent in decade

SCROLL FOR NEXT