Tuesday, 10 January 2017

Situational awareness & 2017 alerts for Euro sports


The wave of terrorism certainly hit Europe at large in 2016. And, still various intelligence and media reports insinuate that the ISIS jihadists are in Europe to plot " brutal 2017 slaughter across Europe to spark apocalypse".

According to the Europol, the European Union Law Enforcement Agency, all the EU member states participating in the coalition against Islamic State are regarded by the subsequent terrorist organisation as "legitimate targets." In a report published last month the Agency also opined that in the wake of murderous attacks in Belgium and France in 2016 extremists are very likely to strike again in the near future.

Those attacks, most horribly the shootout and bombings outside the Sate de France, were the product of the ISIS who was all proud to take credit for the events, as well as threaten further the globe with more similar kind of tragedies. The Paris attack 2015 was the first time that a major game venue had been targeted for sports terrorism in Europe during the last 40 years. And, with so many football matches occurring in stadium in each UEFA member states leaves the public wondering "could we be the next"?  

The Europol report identified few countries by stating: "France remains high in the target list for ISIS aggression in the EU, but so do Belgium, Germany, The Netherlands and the United Kingdom." These are all leading UEFA members having the best and richest domestic football league fixtures of the world in terms of business, popularity, TV audience as well as stadium spectatorships. Analysts believe those who have managed to enter the EU -- in the shape of refugees and immigrants -- pose a potential security risk for the Union. "Given the high numbers involved, this represents a significant and long term security challenge", a security expert says.   

The ISIS spokesman magazine Dabiq on the other hand also called for lone-wolf attacks throughout Europe as "final, apocalyptic showdown" in the forthcoming days.

Ever since the number of attacks on big game events and sports related activities in the world has grown, the sports-going public is also getting aware about the risks of participating in public sports events. Europe that contributes a sizable chunk in global sports in terms of both events and business may naturally be traded in fear  because of these threats and alerts. But sports must go on and there is no justification to alter the schedules, capacity of spectatorship and standards of facilities to the fans. However, the fans and spectators must be earlier briefed and equipped about particular set of prescribed guidelines of situational awareness in case of any emergency situation.

Therefore there is still a sizable coordination and effectiveness required between this situational awareness on behalf of public  and operational planning by authorities . As an example, the barrier between sportsmen and their fans has widened and hardened on the name of security these days, for which the later needs to be made confidant in this regards to restrict them from violence and vandalism. Athletes and footballers are similarly on occasions required to carry ID cards to board their own team buses, and may hire their own security details. That doesn't implicate every fan as a potential threat or every athlete as a potential fraud, it is just the modern demands of sports security.     

 Acknowledging the scale of threat in Europe, the Europol Director Rob Wainwright says "The last two years have seen a number of jihadist attacks, several of which have caused mass casualties." And, it was witnessed in 2016 that majority of these attacks were carried out in sports related events or in public mass gatherings.  That's why situational awareness can be an additional safety mechanism if not the solution of this problem.


By

M. Wasim

mwasim.370@gmail.com