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Indigenous former players have launched a class action against Australian Rules football bosses for failing to protect them from racist insults on the field, their lawyers said on Saturday.
The “vile racial abuse” resulted in “life-altering damage” to the players, said Margalit Injury Lawyers, which is handling the claim against the governing Australian Football League.
“The racial abuse suffered by players was extreme – not just words, but repugnant physical acts such as spitting and violence,” the legal firm’s managing principal Michel Margalit said in a statement provided to AFP.
“The AFL was aware of this racial abuse and, as the keeper of the code, failed to take decisive action to protect players.”
The group of seven former players is led by Phil Krakouer, a star player with North Melbourne in the 1980s.
“I was a 22-year-old kid that tried out for the big league. I was completely naive and full of dreams. I was hoping that great things were going to happen. It was a professional sport and the AFL allowed us to be abused and traumatised,” Krakouer said.
“We signed up to play football, not to be racially abused.”
Others are expected to join the suit, which covers Indigenous people who were AFL players or officials from 1975 to 2022, the lawyers said.