Uefa has drawn up plans to relocate Euro 2016 matches or play them behind closed doors if the tournament is threatened by terrorist attacks.
With the finals 100 days away and France still in a state of emergency after the devastating attacks on Paris last November, when 137 people were killed, Uefa, European football’s governing body, admitted yesterday that it has been forced to make contingency plans.
England, Northern Ireland, Ireland and Wales are among the 24 teams who have qualified. With 51 matches taking place in cities across France over a one-month period from June 10, the tournament director admitted yesterday that, even though there has been no intelligence of any specific threat, security is a concern.
“Security always comes first,” Martin Kallen, the Euro 2016 tournament director, told Sport Bild , the German magazine. “We would not do anything that would endanger people.
“With the government, we have played through several different dry-run scenarios in order to be prepared to [address] what to do if a game has to be postponed because of the terrorist threat.
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“We would move the game — at the latest to the next day — and then the question would be whether to play with or without a crowd.”
Kallen added that matches could have to be played behind closed doors “if we had to relocate a game to another city because of the terrorist threat”.
“Spectators who have tickets for this game might not be able to make it [to a relocated fixture] at such short notice, to travel and to get a hotel,” he said. “To put it bluntly, security and the implementation have priority over everything else.”