Germany will not face any disciplinary action from FIFA, the PA news agency understands, after taking the OneLove armband protest to a new level.
The move marked another day of tension between the seven European nations who supported the OneLove campaign and FIFA, with the group โ which includes the English and Welsh FAs โ exploring their legal options over the matter.
The Football Association declined to comment on whether the England team would copy the German gesture ahead of their match against the United States on Friday, while the Football Association of Wales chief executive Noel Mooney said he was โfuriousโ with FIFAโs behaviour in the armband row.
England and Wales were only told hours before their opening matches on Monday that they would face sporting sanctions if captains Harry Kane and Gareth Bale wore the rainbow-coloured armbands.
Mooney told ITV: โMonths and months (FIFA) have known we were going to wear the OneLove armband, and to lay that one on us is pretty cheap and pretty low to be frank and weโre really disappointed by that attitude.
โWeโve been absolutely furious about this, weโve given FIFA everything weโve got in terms of how furious we are about this decision. We think this was a terrible decision.โ
Asked whether he felt it looked like the OneLove group had backed down, Mooney said: โWe didnโt back down. We had to look at the sporting sanction that was there.
โWe had said we would take fines, we would accept whatever sanctions came, but when it turned at the very last moment to specific sporting sanctions that would have stopped our players taking the field of play potentially, thatโs a different thing. It was done so late.โ
The OneLove campaign started in September and runs for a year but was set to be especially significant during the World Cup in Qatar, a country where same-sex relationships are criminalised.
PA understands lawyers for the group are looking at the regulations to examine the sanctions the associations were threatened with. Danish FA chief executive Jakob Jensen confirmed legal options were being explored, but said the group could not immediately go to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Speaking about the โcovered mouthsโ gesture after his sideโs 2-1 defeat to Japan, Germany coach Hansi Flick said: โIt was a sign, a message that we wanted to send out. We wanted to convey the message that FIFA is silencing us.โ
The German gesture could have prompted disciplinary action from FIFA under Article 11 of its disciplinary code. It states that anyone โusing a sports event for demonstrations of a non-sporting natureโ may be sanctioned.
FIFA has yet to comment on what the German team did, but it is understood there will be no formal disciplinary action from the governing body.
A tweet from the German federation read: โWe wanted to use our captainโs armband to take a stand for values that we hold in the Germany national team: diversity and mutual respect. Together with other nations, we wanted our voice to be heard.
โIt wasnโt about making a political statement โ human rights are non-negotiable. That should be taken for granted, but it still isnโt the case. Thatโs why this message is so important to us. Denying us the armband is the same as denying us a voice. We stand by our position.โ
There is a risk though of the German gesture being an isolated one.
Switzerland are also part of the OneLove group, but their captain Granit Xhaka indicated his team would not stage a similar protest ahead of their opening match against Cameroon on Thursday.
Belgium, another member of the group, kicked off their World Cup campaign against Canada on Wednesday night but did not make any gesture before kick-off. Defender Jan Vertonghen had said on Tuesday he felt players were afraid to speak out in Qatar and were being controlled.
England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford was asked about the armbands controversy on Wednesday and said: โAs a squad we all had conversations and we all stand for it. We all wanted Harry to wear it, but I think the decision got taken out of our hands as a squad and as players. It went higher up than that really.โ
Germanyโs on-field gesture was reinforced in the stands at the Khalifa Stadium by interior minister Nancy Faeser wearing a OneLove armband in the VIP box.
Sitting to her right was FIFA president Gianni Infantino, who on the eve of the tournament launched an extraordinary attack on the โhypocrisyโ of European nations over their criticism of Qatar on human rights issues.
Discontent among the group towards FIFA is building, with the German federation saying just before the tournament it would not support the re-election of Infantino, who is due to be unopposed in the vote next year, while the Danish FA has taken the same stance.
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