Brazilian chamber approves blacklist for sports racism

Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved on Tuesday a blacklist for sports entities convicted of racism. The measure punishes clubs for acts by fans, athletes or officials and heads to the Senate. Listed entities lose public contracts and tax benefits for two years.

Brazil's Chamber of Deputies gave symbolic approval on Tuesday (24) to a bill creating the Sports Racism Blacklist. Originally authored by Deputy Bandeira de Mello (PSB-RJ), the text was expanded by rapporteur Deputy Laura Carneiro (PSD-RJ) in the Sports Commission to cover all sports practice entities, not just soccer. It now awaits Senate review. Entities convicted for racist acts by fans, athletes, technical staff or officials at sports events will be listed after a final court ruling. The listing lasts two years, unless early removal is proven through anti-racism actions. While listed, clubs cannot sign public contracts or receive sponsorships or tax benefits, akin to the slave labor blacklist. Lawmakers cited racism cases against Real Madrid striker Vinicius Junior, who has filed over 20 lawsuits in Spanish courts, with two convictions. In February, during Benfica vs. Real Madrid, Argentine player Gianluca Prestianni was accused of racist insults, halting the match for ten minutes; he was provisionally suspended by Uefa. Debate arose over punishing teams for fans' acts. Deputy Luiz Lima (Novo-RJ) asked: “Is one fan enough to punish an entire team with over 500 employees?”. Deputy Alice Portugal (PCdoB-BA), floor rapporteur, responded: “This is the educational nature of the bill; fans must ensure their club stays off such a list”. The provision passed 295-120, with PL, Novo and Missão parties voting against.

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Dramatic illustration of the racism allegation incident during the Benfica-Real Madrid Champions League match, with Vinicius Jr. confronting the referee and Benfica player.
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UEFA probes racism claim in Benfica-Real Madrid Champions League clash

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Real Madrid secured a 1-0 victory over Benfica in the first leg of their Champions League play-off on February 18, 2026, but the match was overshadowed by an alleged racist slur directed at Vinicius Jr. by Benfica's Gianluca Prestianni. The game halted for about eight minutes after Vinicius reported the incident to referee François Letexier, who activated the anti-racism protocol. UEFA has launched an investigation into the matter.

Benfica has suspended five supporters following incidents of racist behavior during the first leg of their Champions League knockout play-off against Real Madrid on February 17, 2026. The action comes after an internal investigation into inappropriate conduct in the stands, amid accusations involving player Gianluca Prestianni and Vinícius Júnior. The Portuguese club emphasized its zero-tolerance policy on discrimination.

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UEFA has provisionally suspended Benfica midfielder Gianluca Prestianni for the second leg of the Champions League playoff against Real Madrid following allegations of discriminatory behavior toward Vinicius Junior. The decision comes after an incident that interrupted the first leg in Lisbon, where Real Madrid won 1-0. Benfica plans to appeal the ruling as investigations continue.

Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved the base text of Bill No. 5,582/2025, known as the Anti-Faction Bill, on Tuesday (November 18, 2025), with 370 votes in favor and 110 against. The bill, authored by the Lula government, was modified by rapporteur Guilherme Derrite (PP-SP) in six versions, marking a defeat for the executive, which attempted to delay the vote. The text now heads to the Senate, where it will be reported by Alessandro Vieira (MDB-SE).

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Gianluca Prestianni, provisionally suspended by UEFA for an alleged racial slur against Vinicius Jr, has joined the Benfica squad in Madrid for the Champions League play-off second leg against Real Madrid. The Argentine denies any wrongdoing, and Benfica officials have voiced strong support for his innocence. Tensions remain high following the first leg, where Vinicius scored the winner amid the controversy.

 

 

 

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