Napoli fans back Kalidou Kalidou Koulibaly

MILAN. — Thousands of Napoli fans showed their support for Senegalese defender Kalidou Koulibaly who was subjected to racist chanting at Inter Milan in midweek by wearing masks and holding up his picture before their team’s Italian Serie A football match against Bologna on Saturday.

Posters with the message “Siamo Tutti Koulibaly” (“We are all Koulibaly”) were visible throughout the Stadio San Paolo during the game which the hosts won 3-2.

Napoli’s French-born player Koulibaly was targeted by monkey noises and racist chants at the San Siro on Wednesday, before being sent off for sarcastically applauding the referee.

Serie A returned to action three days after the violent clashes in Milan during which an Inter supporter died after being hit by a car.

And fans showed their solidarity with Koulibaly, wearing masks with the player’s face, as well as t-shirts bearing his name.

The home fans also displayed a banner on front of the stadium, “We are all Koulibaly: no to racism!,” with fliers in the stadium “Koulibaly big brother” or “We’re with you Kalidou”.

Among them a very young fan held up a poster with: “I’m small, but a man like Koulibaly”.

On the pitch, Napoli’s Algerian defender Faouzi Ghoulam wore Koulibaly’s number 26 shirt in warm-up with the Senegalese player suspended after his sending off on Wednesday.

“It doesn’t matter the colour of the skin. It doesn’t matter religion. It doesn’t matter what team you’re rooting for. Football, like all sports, is a game. And all the games are passion, fun, freedom: And in freedom we are all alike! Tomorrow we will all be koulibaly!,” Ghoulam tweeted before the match.

European football governing body UEFA said that the correct anti-racism protocol had not been followed during the midweek game.

And Napoli coach Carlo Ancelotti said on Saturday they would have been in favour of the match being suspended temporarily.

“There was a bit of confusion after Milan, we never asked for the suspension, but three times a temporary interruption. — AFP.

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