The 32-year-old former Inter and AC Milan midfielder was OSRS gold handed a one-match ban for receiving two yellow cards. Cagliari escaped punishment because Serie A's disciplinary body said only 10 fans were to blame."Only a callous commission disciplinary would ignore the full picture of what went on here.
Piara Powar, executive director of the anti-discrimination Fare Network, told The Associated Press. "It's set a very dangerous precedent. There are recurring incidents and the Italian football authorities are not dealing with them in the right way."Muntari's case hasn't been the only one in recent days. Both Inter Milan and Lazio were found guilty by Serie A's disciplinary division after fans bellowed racist abuse during games.
The punishment for both teams was having parts of more benefit their stadiums closed - but only if there is a repeat of the conduct.For Powar, who advises European soccer's governing body on discrimination, these cases demonstrate a complete "failure of the regulatory processes."It's not a problem confined to one or two countries.
"It's endemic across Europe at the moment," Powar said.___SANCTIONSDerisory fines were typical in racism cases until a high-profile incident in 2013 spurred the authorities into action.Just like last weekend, it saw a Ghanaian walking off an Italian soccer field that sparked change.