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Majority of trolls who sent racist abuse to Bukayo Saka , Marcus Rashford and Jadon Sancho after Euro 2020 final were NOT British and most live abroad, BBC investigation reveals

The majority of trolls who sent vile racist abuse to Bukayo Saka, Marcus Rashford and Jadon Sancho on social media were not England fans and live abroad, often thousands of miles from the UK, a new investigation revealed today.

Boris Johnson and Prince William condemned the mindless racists who bombarded the footballers with monkey, gorilla and banana emojis after they missed penalties in the Euro 2020 final defeat to Italy this summer. 

But today a BBC investigation has revealed that the vast majority of those who sent racist abuse were not from the UK at all. Most were non-Britons living abroad, many with far-right sympathies, including trolls in Russia, across Europe, Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 

The racist abuse in the aftermath of the Euro 2020 final saw England labelled a 'racist country' with an 'ingrained culture of intolerance', some claimed was made worse by Britain leaving the EU. 

Now disproved claims hundreds of England fans were ready to racially abuse their own players heaped more shame on the nation after drunk and cocaine-filled hooligans without tickets stormed through paper-thin security at Wembley Stadium during the semi-final and final. 

There are also uncomfortable questions for Instagram about how serious it is about stamping out racism after researchers, aided by the Centre for Countering Digital Hate, found 79 of 105 accounts flagged were still not deleted or suspended six weeks later. 

Tory MP Michael Fabricant told MailOnline: 'I am very reassured and heartened to hear that most of the vile racist abuse came from abroad and not from people living in the UK. Some of this may have been 'bots' some of this may just have been plain awful racists. But I am glad to hear that the police are taking action with the few British citizens who posted such nasty nonsense.' 

At the time Labour's deputy leader Angela Rayner accused the Prime Minister and his Home Secretary Priti Patel of stoking up racism, having both refused to condemn those who booed players taking a knee because of its links to the Black Lives Matter movement. 

Tory MP Karl McCartney told MailOnline Labour had engaged in ‘band wagon jumping’ and ‘virtue signalling’ over the grim episode. ‘Obviously it was wrong whoever geographically it emanated from, but Labour couldn’t wait to ‘’dog whistle’’ and try to embarrass government ministers – as per usual,’ he said.

today one of the culprits, a man 2,000 miles from Britain in Saudi Arabia with no links to the UK, admitted he had sent Saka a number of monkey emojis while watching the match with Italy.

Confronted by the BBC he said: 'I'm sorry for sending the abuse, I was caught up in the moment watching the game with friends. I was a bit mistake because I was angry and I didn't know what he would feel when he saw the monkeys. I really want to apologise to Saka, it was a mistake and I won't do it again to him or any black player.'

He also added that he was only suspended by Instagram for 24 hours, but believes he should have been banned 'forever' because his post was 'really racist'.   

Manager Gareth Southgate hugs Bukayo Saka after he missed his penalty, that sparked an torrent of foul online abuse now revealed to be mainly from racists abroad

Manager Gareth Southgate hugs Bukayo Saka after he missed his penalty, that sparked an torrent of foul online abuse now revealed to be mainly from racists abroad

Racists have bombarded Bukayo Saka, Marcus Rashford and Jodan Sancho with abhorrent abuse after the trio missed their penalties during tonight's Euro 2020 finalRacists have bombarded Bukayo Saka, Marcus Rashford and Jodan Sancho with abhorrent abuse after the trio missed their penalties during tonight's Euro 2020 final

Racists have bombarded Bukayo Saka, Marcus Rashford and Jodan Sancho with abhorrent abuse after the trio missed their penalties. An investigation has found that most were abroad

Three-quarters of racist accounts reported to Instagram after Euro 2020 final were still running six weeks later, probe found 

Instagram had 105 accounts reported to Instagram in the wake of the the Euro final. 

File on 4 found 79 of these were still up online more than six weeks later.

Callum Hood, from the Centre for Countering Digital Hate, said: 'Instagram itself had said earlier in the year it would ban accounts that send racial abuse to footballers, so they're clearly not delivering on that promise,' he said.

'We're talking about people using the N-word to abuse footballers, people posting monkey emojis, telling people to go home.

'Social media platforms have their own standards which say they don't allow racism, that there's no place for it on their platforms, but their actions show they don't care about it enough to actually deal with the problem.'

 

Former Manchester City defender Nedum Onuoha said: 'Where he says, "I should be banned for life", it feels like he's saying that because he thinks that's the right thing to say. 

'He went to Bukayo Saka's Instagram account and put a monkey emoji in a comment for one of his posts when he didn't have to, but did it because everyone else was doing it.

'He probably thought everyone else was as angry as he was. I understand disappointment but anger is where for me it crosses a line, because it makes people behave in ways like this, which I think is just wrong on every level'.

Police investigating the online racial abuse of England players following the Euro 2020 final have made 11 arrests so far.

But detectives also found that almost four times more of the criminal comments were posted from overseas. 

The BBC's File on Four also revealed that Instagram only banned some of the accounts for as little as 24 hours despite sending monkey emojis and and racist language such as n****r.

File on Four found him thanks to research from the Centre for Countering Digital Hate and said the troll had said he thought he should have been banned permanently. 

Twitter removed more than 1,900 racist, abusive tweets in the wake of England's Euro 2020 final defeat, the social media giant revealed last month.   

The social media giant said racism was a 'deep societal issue' still also taking place offline, but acknowledged it needed to do better to make its platform safe and encouraged further collective action alongside government and football authorities.

In an update on its response to the incident, Twitter said it had put in place plans to 'quickly identify and remove racist, abusive tweets targeting the England team and wider Euros conversation' before the tournament.

The site and others have been accused of being slow to respond to online abuse and removing it, but Twitter said as a result of these plans, only 2% of the tweets removed following the final generated more than 1,000 impressions, or views, before being taken down.

It said it was continuing to work on ways to reduce the visibility of this type of content to ensure fewer people see it before it removed.

The company also said the UK was 'by far' the largest country of origin for the abusive tweets on the night of the final and the days that followed.

Marcus Rashford puts his face in his hands after missing his penalty by striking the postJadon Sancho puts his head in his hands after he failed to score in the penalty shoot out in tonight's Euro 2020 final

Marcus Rashford, left, and Jadon Sancho have their heads in their hands after missing their kicks

Prince William said he was appalled by the comments aimed at the England players

Prince William said he was appalled by the comments aimed at the England players

In response to the incident, some campaigners have called for ID verification to be introduced to social media to cut the spread of online abuse and help quickly identify those involved, but Twitter said its analysis suggests this would have been unlikely to prevent the abuse during the Euros from happening.

According to Twitter's data, 99% of the account owners it suspended during the tournament for abuse rule breaches were identifiable and not posting anonymously.

'Our aim is always that Twitter be used as a vehicle for every person to communicate safely - be it in highlighting injustice or giving a voice to those communities who have been historically under-represented,' Twitter UK said.

'There is no place for racist abuse on Twitter and we are determined to do all we can to stop these abhorrent views and behaviours from being seen on our platform.

'We can do better. We fully acknowledge our responsibility to ensure the service is safe - not just for the football community, but for all users.

'However, we also have to be honest that the progress we will be able to make alone would be magnified by greater interventions across the board.

'As long as racism exists offline, we will continue to see people try and bring these views online - it is a scourge technology cannot solve alone.

'Everyone has a role to play - including the government and the football authorities - and we will continue to call for a collective approach to combat this deep societal issue.'

Andrew Bone, 37, called in Greater Manchester PoliceA racist tweet was published on Andrew Bone's Twitter account

Andrew Bone (left and right) called in Greater Manchester Police after a racist tweet was published on his Twitter account. He denied posting the message and said his account had been hacked

The message was posted on the page of Mr Bone shortly after three England players missed their penalties. He denies he was responsible

The message was posted on the page of Mr Bone shortly after three England players missed their penalties. He denies he was responsible

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Last week, police investigating the online racial abuse of England players following the Euro 2020 final have made 11 arrests so far.

The UK Football Policing Unit say its investigation team has received more than 600 reports from individuals, charities, clubs and other organisations across the country, and 207 were criminal in nature, with 34 accounts identified as being in the UK.

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