Police assure England and Wales footballers they will deal with online abuse
Detective Superintendent Jamie Henderson has visited the England squad to explain to them the tools available.

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Your support makes all the difference.England and Wales footballers have been assured that police will act swiftly to respond to online abuse directed at them during the World Cup in Qatar.
Detective Superintendent Jamie Henderson has visited the England squad to explain to them the tools available on social media platforms which can help filter out abuse.
But he added systems are in place with the respective football associations to ensure his officers can investigate, take statements from affected players and work to identify those responsible for any abuse judged to be a criminal offence.
Mr Henderson said he hopes there will not be a repeat of the aftermath of Euro 2020 final in which Marcus Rashford, Jadon Sancho and Bukayo Saka were targeted following missed penalties in Englandās defeat to Italy.
Mr Henderson, the UK Football Policing Unitās investigations lead, told the PA news agency: āIf there is anything that gets through, weāll be there trying to find that person.
āIf theyāre in the UK, weāll take the action and seek the prosecutions.
āIf they turn out to be international, which the large majority in the Euros were international accounts, weāll work with the NCA (National Crime Agency) to try and pass on that information to those countries to try to bring them to justice over there, providing theyāre a country that has the right laws because some donāt have hate speech laws that we have.ā
Mr Henderson added: āThey just want to play football, they donāt want this added issue of people being vile racists with the abhorrent things that go on social media.
āThey donāt want to detract away from them doing the business on the field, so weāre quick to respond to that.ā
He went on: āThe systems weāve got set up with the FA and FA of Wales ā weāve got processes in place where we can identify the player thatās involved, we can get statements taken on their behalf so it doesnāt involve introducing the police officer to them, and weāll then take that investigation away and hopefully thereāll be an outcome at the end of it.
āIf it is a British-based offender weāll seek to put them before the courts.ā
Mr Henderson highlighted that stadium banning orders can now be imposed on those responsible for online abuse.
Mr Hendersonās UK-based team will also work to secure evidence if there are any incidents involving England and Wales fans in Qatar.
This may involve seeking to impose banning orders for bad behaviour or to investigate a serious offence committed against a British national during the tournament, with a file of evidence passed on to the Qatari authorities.