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Ex-cop linked to Chelsea racism case

LONDON — A former police officer is one of the Chelsea fans being sought by officers investigating an alleged racist incident in Paris, his solicitor said on Sunday, in a statement that apologised to the victim.

Chelsea fans with an anti-racism banner before Saturday’s Burnley game. Photo: Getty Images

Chelsea fans with an anti-racism banner before Saturday’s Burnley game. Photo: Getty Images

LONDON — A former police officer is one of the Chelsea fans being sought by officers investigating an alleged racist incident in Paris, his solicitor said on Sunday, in a statement that apologised to the victim.

Richard Barklie — a former Northern Ireland police officer — denied taking part in racist chanting but admitted to being involved in the incident where a black man was pushed off a Paris metro train. It was captured on video before Chelsea’s Champions League match at Paris Saint-Germain last Tuesday.

London’s Metropolitan Police said on Saturday it had identified three men being sought in connection with the incident as it supports a French police investigation.

Barklie’s legal team said they have contacted the London force, which “confirmed ... that arrangements were in hand to take the investigation to the next stage”.

After the victim, who was identified in the French media as Souleymane S, was seen on video being forcibly pushed off the train, fans were heard chanting: “We’re racist and that’s the way we like it.”

Barklie, a season ticket-holder at Stamford Bridge, does not know the other people shown in the Paris video, his solicitor Kevin Winters said.

“He did not participate in racist chanting and singing, and condemns any behaviour supporting that,” Winters said. “He accepts he was involved in an incident when a person now known to him as Souleymane S was unable to enter a part of the train.

“He has an account to give to police which will explain the context and circumstances as they prevailed at that particular time. In the meantime ... he wants to put on record his sincerest apologies for the trauma and stress suffered by Mr Souleymane.”

Barklie is a director with the World Human Rights Forum, a global organisation with offices in Northern Ireland. “Pending formal engagement with the police, our client is anxious to put on record his total abhorrence for racism and any activity associated with it,” Winters said. “As someone who has spent years working with disadvantaged communities in Africa and India, he can point to a CV in human rights work which undermines any suggestion he is racist.” AP

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