News about Zakir Hussain

IAN HERBERT: Taking football into the cesspit- What the hell has our game come to when twisted cretins can mock a tragic child cancer victim?

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 1, 2023
Of course, it's impossible to be 100% sure without having seen them, but the two low-life attention seekers who turned football into a cesspit on Friday night appeared to be well dressed up for a match between Sheffield Wednesday and Sunderland. One of them wore a rose-pink jacket as he held up his phone to flash a picture of Bradley Lowery - a child who lost a fight with cancer at the age of six, at Sunderland supporters. His companion, who was largely amused by this, had self-consciously buttoned his own jacket up to the neck and appeared to have visited the barbers ahead of their big night out. Yes. Attention seekers. They certainly earned the spotlight they deserved, although they didn't quite estimate the public's rage at a child with neuroblastoma who raised £1 million for charity before he died in 2017. That's a lot. For a moment's reflection or thought, Twisted cretins like this are too intellectually challenged and flooded with confected hatred.

As football's governing bodies announce new Crown Prosecution Service regulations, offensive football fans have been warned of match bans for bullying about tragedies

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 7, 2023
The Crown Prosecution Service's (CPS)'s most recent update addresses tragedy-related violence, which occurs when fans sing, chant, or gesture insulting information about injuries or incidents involving players or supporters. The Football Association, Premier League, and English Football League's guideline states that tragedy-related harassment can be viewed as a public order offence.