[Publicidad]
Centenary Copa America officials say homophobic chanting at international matches "must stop" but they have opted not to take action against offending teams.
"The Confederation of North, Central America and the Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) and the Confederation of South American Football (CONMEBOL) take any chants or actions that are derogatory or offensive during our matches very seriously," organizers said in a joint statement on Thursday.
"This behavior does not reflect the true spirit of soccer and must be stopped."
The confederations said they launched an 'Embrace Diversity' campaign before the tournament and promised more initiatives in the future.
However, unlike soccer's ruling body FIFA, which fined Argentina, Chile, Honduras, Mexico, Peru and Uruguay for homophobic chants by fans earlier this year, the confederations decided to take no action.
The shouts have been heard at many matches at the Centenary Copa America in the United States and usually come when goalkeepers run up to take goal kicks.
[Publicidad]
The practice described by FIFA as "insulting and discriminatory chants" has been particularly noticeable in games involving Mexico.
[Publicidad]
Más información

Nación
Alistan detalles para visita del presidente de Corea del Sur a México; Roberto Velasco recibe a embajador

Universal Deportes
Mundial 2026: Egipto vs Irán EN VIVO - Grupo G - HOY, viernes 26 de junio

Nación
Sheinbaum pide investigar presunta violencia del exdirector de Pemex contra su esposa; asegura habrá apoyo a la víctima

Nación
Personas trans y no binarias bloquean Reforma a horas del Pride en CDMX; exigen diálogo con Segob






