Global football campaign aims to boycott Israel

Global football campaign aims to boycott Israel
A coalition of former players, supporters’ groups, human rights organisations, advocacy networks and influencers has launched a campaign calling for a boycott of Israeli football. (X/@novaramedia)
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Updated 16 September 2025
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Global football campaign aims to boycott Israel

Global football campaign aims to boycott Israel
  • #GameOverIsrael launched by coalition of fan associations, ex-players, rights groups
  • Federations of 9 countries urged to shun matches against Israeli teams, ban Israeli players

LONDON: Major football federations are being pressured to boycott matches against Israel as part of a new global campaign launched by high-profile organizations and figures from the world’s most popular sport. 

The #GameOverIsrael campaign was launched on Tuesday by a major coalition of human rights groups, fan associations, former players and influencers across nine major footballing countries: Belgium, England, France, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Norway, Scotland and Spain.

As part of the campaign, organizers are calling on the football federations of their countries to boycott Israel’s national team and club teams, and prevent Israeli footballers from playing in their domestic leagues.

A press release issued by the campaign said it aims to “take a principled stand against Israel’s ongoing assault on Palestinian life and infrastructure, including sports facilities and athletes in Gaza.”

Through the power of football fans, “ordinary people across the world can join the chorus and demand accountability by joining a local protest and applying pressure on the football federations, who run the game they love and support, to take immediate action,” it added.

Israel has long used sports and culture to whitewash its violations of international law and human rights, said Richard Falk, former UN special rapporteur on the Occupied Territories.

He added: “Sporting governing bodies have been shamefully complicit during this genocide. It’s perfectly legitimate and morally imperative to demand that football federations across Europe and the world boycott Israel. Normalcy is complicity in this abnormal time of prolonged genocide.”

The campaign follows a series of measures by European countries to pressure Israel to end the Gaza war.

In August, the Italian Football Coaches’ Association called on the country’s football federation to demand Israel’s suspension from competitions.

Spain launched nine measures aimed at encouraging an end to the Gaza war, including an arms embargo.

The #GameOverIsrael campaign called on the Royal Spanish Football Federation, the country’s body for the sport, to pursue a total boycott of ties to Israel.

Meanwhile, Norway’s federation pledged to donate ticket revenue from its FIFA 2026 World Cup qualifier match against Israel on Oct. 11 to humanitarian aid in Gaza.

Former UN human rights official Craig Mokhiber said: “We are living through a dark moment in history in which a people, locked in the chains of apartheid, are being exterminated before our eyes. None of us will be able to say we did not know. Inaction in such circumstances is complicity.”

He added: “But we do have the power to act. Sport is a powerful social force. And football, ‘the beautiful game,’ can be a powerful channel for action.

“Demand that your football federation, and all federations, boycott Israel. Keep football beautiful.”

The #GameOverIsrael campaign is being advised by British-Palestinian plastic surgeon Dr. Ghassan Abu-Sittah and organizations including the Gaza Tribunal, the Hind Rajab Foundation and Tech for Palestine.

Prominent supporters of the campaign include former footballer and BBC commentator Gary Lineker; former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis; Irish actor Liam Cunningham; British journalist and author Matt Kennard; Irish performer and activist Tadhg Hickey; British surgeon Nick Maynard; and Bobby Vylan of punk rap duo Bob Vylan.

Love Rovers Hate Racism, a fan group of the Irish club Shamrock Rovers FC, said: “We are approaching the two-year mark of the genocide in Gaza. What more is there to say? Why haven’t football federations boycotted Israel?

“They’re supposed to represent football and the fans. It is unfathomable, unconscionable. They should be ashamed. We demand they act now and boycott Israel and get them off our pitches.”


German soccer want compensation for developing players who switch to other nations

German soccer want compensation for developing players who switch to other nations
Updated 55 min 31 sec ago
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German soccer want compensation for developing players who switch to other nations

German soccer want compensation for developing players who switch to other nations
  • “We’re currently checking whether there’s a possibility of coaching compensation when players switch national associations,” Rettig said
  • Germany have long seen players with one or two parents born abroad opt to represent their country of their roots

BERLIN: The German soccer federation (DFB) want compensation when players opt to represent other countries after representing Germany at youth levels.
“It simply makes no sense to me why a player who has been coached primarily at his club for five years but also by the federation as a junior partner should be able to switch national associations for free,” DFB managing director Andreas Rettig told news agency dpa on Tuesday.
German-born Juventus star Kenan Yıldız is a Turkish international, having played for Turkiye’s youth teams. Eintracht Frankfurt forward Can Uzun also turned down Germany in favor of Turkiye.
Former Hertha Berlin forward Ibrahim Maza, now playing for Bayer Leverkusen, plays for Algeria after appearing for Germany at youth levels.
German youth internationals Muhammed Damar and Nicolò Tresoldi are reportedly being courted by Turkiye and Italy, respectively, and the Frankfurter Rundschau daily newspaper reported on Sunday that Nuremberg defender Fabio Gruber has chosen to represent Peru.
“We’re currently checking whether there’s a possibility of coaching compensation when players switch national associations,” Rettig said. “This issue has not yet been addressed extensively. But coaching must be worthwhile for both sides, the player and the coach.”
Germany have long seen players with one or two parents born abroad opt to represent their country of their roots, while the country has also benefited from immigration as players such as İlkay Gündoğan, Mesut Özil, Sami Khedira and Gerald Asamoah have contributed to the national team’s success.
Cologne teenager Said El Mala was last week called up for Germany’s World Cup qualifiers this week and at least 12 players in the latest squad could have chosen to represent other countries. The injured Jamal Musiala chose Germany after playing for England youth teams.
“In Germany 43 percent of children under five years of age hold dual citizenship. When they’re 10 or 12 years older they can decide, do I prefer the (German) eagle or, for example, the (Turkish) crescent moon?” Rettig said.
“We analyzed the squad lists from the under-15s to the under-21s within the federation. The percentage there is significantly higher than the aforementioned 43 percent. There are age groups in which seven or eight players in the starting 11 have dual nationality.”
FIFA would need to approve and enforce any system of compensation payments. Other countries like France, England, Switzerland and the Netherlands could also expect windfalls from home-grown players’ switches to other teams.