Berlin: German Bundesliga club Schalke has suspended chairman Clemens Toennies for three months following widespread condemnation of racist comments he made last week.
###
The club’s five-strong ethics committee, in a statement late Tuesday, accused Toennies of having “violated the ban on discrimination contained in the club’s statutes” after a lengthy meeting in which Toennies had to explain himself.
###
But the body dismissed the accusation of racism as “unfounded” and consequently spared him the heavier sanction of dismissing him.
###
The 63-year-old has been sharply criticised for saying more power stations should be built in Africa, “then Africans would stop felling trees and producing children when it gets dark”.
###
The billionaire businessman made the remark at a forum in the northwestern city of Paderborn on Thursday while criticising tax increases to fight climate change.
###
On social media, numerous Schalke fans and former players demanded his resignation as chairman of the club’s supervisory board, while senior figures in German football and politics have condemned his comment.
###
Justice Minister Christine Lambrecht called on the German Football Association (DFB) to “deal” with Toennies.
###
“Racism must be loudly and clearly contradicted” at every opportunity,” the politician told the Funke media group.
###
“Nowhere is integration as successful and quick to work as in sport – that must not be put at risk.”
###
Toennies apologised for his “inappropriate” words on Sunday, insisting he backs Schalke’s values against “racism, discrimination and exclusion”.
###
The comments are a distraction for Schalke, under new head coach David Wagner, who start their league season at Borussia Moenchengladbach on August 17.
###