Malaysia football braced for punishment after flare chaos

Malaysia football braced for punishment after flare chaos

KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia's football body braced for possible punishment on Wednesday after flare-throwing fans forced the abandonment of a World Cup qualifier in ugly scenes which deepened the country's soccer crisis.

Flares can be seen on the pitch during the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying match between Malaysia and Saudi Arabia in Shah Alam on September 8, 2015

The embattled Football Association of Malaysia (FAM), under heavy fire since last week's record 10-0 defeat to UAE, said it was "awaiting the decision of FIFA" after Tuesday's incident.

Militant fans angry at the 10-0 humiliation in UAE fired flares billowing orange smoke at Shah Alam Stadium as Malaysia trailed Saudi Arabia 2-1 in the final minutes late on Tuesday.

Players and officials hurried from the field and Saudi fans ran from the stands as flares flew around the stadium. Eleven people were arrested but no one was reported injured.

"FAM views the issue of security as a serious matter, especially the safety of spectators, players and officials in the stadium," an FAM statement said.

The FAM has been strongly criticised by both supporters and the government after a dire run of results culminated in last week's 10-0 loss.

Malaysia's worst ever defeat was just the latest World Cup qualifying humiliation after they drew 1-1 at home against East Timor and lost 6-0 to Palestine.

Tuesday's conflagration was blamed on the "Ultras Malaya" group of hardcore supporters, who accuse the FAM of incompetence and had threatened to disrupt the match.

- 'FAM lost control' -

"I am truly disappointed by the fans' behaviour," said Ong Kim Swee, who came in as stand-in coach after the UAE debacle cost former handler Dollah Salleh his job.

"While the fans' support is important for any team, what they did last night has damaged the image of Malaysia. Already the image of Malaysian football is suffering."

Malaysian football has been suffering from a rising hooliganism problem along with a steady flow of match-fixing scandals in the domestic leagues.

Police fired tear gas to disperse rioting fans, arresting 25 people, after a Malaysia FA Cup semi-final in May, and last December, five Malaysia supporters were arrested for attacking Vietnamese fans during a heated Suzuki Cup semi-final.

On Wednesday, officials wondered how flares and fireworks were allowed into the stadium despite a heavy security cordon involving hundreds of personnel.

"I am dumbfounded, as despite the tight security outside and inside the stadium fans still smuggled banned items," FAM deputy president Mokhtar Ahmad was quoted saying by the New Straits Times.

"There were only 10,000 fans in the stadium but yet the security could not control them," he added, calling on police to explain.

But Malaysian sports minister Khairy Jamaluddin, who even talked of suspending the FAM after the 10-0 loss, pointed the finger at the football body when he tweeted, "FAM lost control at their own stadium".

World body FIFA and the Asian Football Confederation, which is based in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, are both yet to comment.

FAM president Tengku Abdullah Ahmad Shah had said on Monday he would "step down in stages" over the 10-0 drubbing.

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