Sport
FIFA partner calls for Australian ref to be sacked over hand gesture
Key Points
Australian referee Shaun Evans made an "OK" symbol below his waist during a live World Cup cross. The symbol is used as both a harmless children's game and as a white power symbol in some far-right circles. FIFA's discrimination monitor Fare has called for Evans to be removed from the World Cup.
Australian referee Shaun Evans made an "OK" symbol below his waist during a live World Cup cross.
The symbol is used as both a harmless children's game and as a white power symbol in some far-right circles.
What's next?
FIFA's discrimination monitor Fare has called for Evans to be removed from the World Cup.
FIFA's discrimination monitor at the World Cup has called for an Australian video review official to be removed for appearing to make a hand gesture resembling a white supremacist sign.
When the official broadcast of Germany's opening game against Curaçao on Monday morning (AEST) cut pre-game to show the team of video review analysts, Shaun Evans made an "OK" symbol with his right hand in front of his right leg. Though the game was played in Houston, video officials work in Dallas at the World Cup broadcast centre.
In 2019, the gesture — with thumb and forefinger touched in a circle and other fingers outstretched — was designated a hate symbol by the New York-based Anti-Defamation League.
"Advice from our experts is that the gesture used clearly resembles an upside down 'OK' hand symbol used as a 'white power' symbol in global far-right circles," said the Fare network, a long-time partner of FIFA and European soccer body UEFA to monitor racist and discriminatory chants, flags and symbols at international games.
"Clearly this official should have no further role to play in this World Cup," Fare said in its statement, describing the gesture as "neo-nazi".
ABC Sport has approached FIFA and Football Australia for comment.
It was unclear if Evans, working at his second-straight World Cup and his first game at this edition, was making a political gesture or playing a children's game prank.
The "gotcha" or "circle game" is where someone flashes an upside-down OK sign below their waist and punches in the shoulder anyone who looks at it. It became popular after being used in an episode of comedy TV show Malcolm in the Middle in 2000.
It was appropriated a decade ago as a signal for white supremacy that started as a hoax on the far-right online message board 4chan.
The sign received global attention in March 2019 in New Zealand, after it was made during the first court appearance by the white supremacist shooter who killed 51 Muslim worshippers at two mosques in Christchurch.
Later in 2019, when the sign was designated as a hate symbol, Oren Segal, director of the ADL's Center on Extremism, said context was key to interpreting whether an "OK" symbol is hateful or harmless.
At the time, he said: "There is enough of a volume of use for hateful purposes that we felt it was important to add."
Evans is among 30 video review analysts selected by FIFA to work at the World Cup being played in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
"Why is a VAR supervisor using this symbol at a global football event at the very moment he knows the cameras are on him?" Fare said.
"We note that in the two subsequent games it appears TV directors have stopped introducing the VAR panel to the TV audience."
The ABC of SPORT
Sports content to make you think... or allow you not to. A newsletter delivered each Saturday.