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The 32-year-old man, fan of Everton Grim, is under control Liverpool In the northern city, interrogation on suspicion of racial crime and obstruction at work of an officer on duty.
The man was arrested during an investigation following a tweet on the site. "Twitter"Including an offensive design to the Egyptian striker, which was later removed.
A Merseyside police spokesman told law enforcement officials "He was aware of an insulting tweet against a Liverpool player, shared by others, and investigated".
He added: "Hate-motivated crimes will not be tolerated under any circumstances, and those who use the Internet to target other people and who confuse crimes by doing so, such as Hate crimeThey must understand that they are not above the law. "
The incident was condemned by Everton, where a spokesman for the press quoted a spokesman as "Tuffies," saying that "The club strongly condemns any form of racism."
The speaker explained: "We have shared the content with the relevant authorities and we are looking into the matter to see if the alleged user of Twitter (who posted the tweet) is known to the club in any way that this is.".
Salah, the best Premier League player of the 2017-2018 season and scorer of his two seasons in Liverpool, was the victim of racist behavior by Chelsea fans last season after the broadcast of the season. a video showing them playing a degrading song against their former player, during which he called him "The Terrorist Terrorist".
Liverpool coach Jurgen Klopp commented: "It's shit, another example of what should not happen, we should not look at it like Chelsea and Liverpool."
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Aged 32, a fan of Everton's rival, Liverpool in the northern city, is questioned on suspicion of racial crime and hampers the work of an officer on duty.
The man was arrested on the basis of an investigation, following a tweet posted on the "Twitter" site, which included an offensive caricature against the Egyptian attacker, which was later removed.
A spokesman for the Merseyside Police said the police were "aware of an insulting tweet against a Liverpool player, shared by other people and investigating the l & # 39; 39; case ".
"Hate-motivated crimes will not be hidden under any pretext." Those who use the Internet to target people and commit crimes by doing so, such as hate crimes, need to understand that they are not not above the law. "
"The club strongly condemns all forms of racism," a media spokesman quoted Everton as saying.
"We have shared the content with the relevant authorities and are looking into the matter to see if the alleged Twitter user (who posted the tweet) is known to the club in any way," said the spokesman. word.
Salah, the best Premier League player for the 2017-2018 season and his goal in two seasons in Liverpool, was the victim of racist behavior by Chelsea fans last season after the broadcast of the game. a video showing them playing a degrading song against their former player, calling him a "terrorist terrorist" ".
"It's disgusting," said Liverpool coach Jurgen Klopp. "Another example of what should not happen, we should not watch it between Chelsea and Liverpool."