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Reuters
Reuters
Politics
Fatos Bytyci

Ethnic kin of Swiss scorers rush to pay their World Cup fines

FILE PHOTO: Switzerland's Xherdan Shaqiri celebrates scoring their second goal against Serbia. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo

PRISTINA (Reuters) - Hundreds of ethnic Albanians from Kosovo - including a government minister - have raised enough money to pay the fines imposed on Swiss goalscorers Granit Xhaka and Xherdan Shaqiri for their celebrations in the World Cup win over Serbia.

Both players, who are ethnic Albanians from Kosovo, celebrated by imitating the double-headed eagle displayed on Albania’s flag. Swiss team captain Stephan Lichtsteiner joined them, and they were together fined 25,000 Swiss francs (19,117 pounds) by FIFA.

Soccer Football - World Cup - Group E - Serbia vs Switzerland - Kaliningrad Stadium, Kaliningrad, Russia - June 22, 2018 Switzerland's Granit Xhaka celebrates scoring their first goal REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

Albanians in Kosovo and elsewhere soon rushed to donate to pay the fines, collecting over $27,000 USD.

Bajram Hasani, the minister of Trade and Industry, donated his monthly salary of 1,357 euros via GoFundMe.

"I gave my salary as a sign to support our boys which make us proud," Hasani told Reuters. "This is to show the world we take care of them," he said, adding the Swiss might donate the money should they chose not to accept it. The funds have yet to be sent to the Swiss team.

Serbia refuses to recognise the independence of its former province Kosovo whose 1.8 million people are mostly ethnic Albanians and opposed Kosovo’s ultimately successful bids to join UEFA and FIFA, the governing bodies of European and World soccer.

Four of Switzerland's squad left their homes in the former Yugoslavia as children when war broke out in the 1990s. About three percent of Switzerland's population is ethnic Albanian and for some the Swiss win over Serbia symbolised a victory over their ex-rulers.

In Albania's capital Tirana, Prime Minister Edi Rama opened a bank account to take donations marked: 'Fear Not the Eagle'.

"The sign of eagle with the hands is our way of expressing joy," Rama wrote.

In Pristina, Kosovo's Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj posed on social media with his police bodyguards bringing their palms to their chests and flapping them to symbolize the eagle.

Xhaka and Shaqiri’s celebrations divided opinions in Switzerland, with some defending them and others saying they felt their goals were scored by Kosovo rather than Switzerland.

With Kosovo and Albania not qualified for the World Cup finals, many Kosovans are supporting Switzerland. When Shaqiri and Xhaka scored hundreds took to the streets across Kosovo to celebrate, waiving Kosovan, Albanian and Swiss flags.

In the small village of Zheger in eastern Kosovo, where Shaqiri was born, a whole street was covered with Swiss flags before and after the game.

($1 = 0.9936 Swiss francs)

(Reporting by Fatos Bytyci, Editing by Benet Koleka and Toby Chopra)

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