Granit Xhaka and Xherdan Shaqiri escape ban over Swiss celebration

Duo made eagle symbol of Kosovo in win against Serbia
Each fined £7,600 and Stephan Lichtsteiner fined £3,800

Switzerland’s Granit Xhaka and Xherdan Shaqiri have escaped a ban following their controversial celebrations in the 2-1 World Cup win over Serbia last Friday.

The pair could have faced two-match bans if Fifa had decided their celebrations broke rules on political and offensive messages.

Xhaka and Shaqiri scored in the Group E match and were then charged after they celebrated by putting their hands together to form a double-headed eagle, similar to the one on the Albanian flag.

This nationalist symbol risked inflaming tensions in the Balkans among Serbians – who do not recognise Kosovo’s independence – and ethnic Albanians.

Stoke City’s Shaqiri was born in Kosovo and the Arsenal midfielder Xhaka was born to Albanian parents who were from Serbia. Xhaka’s father was a political prisoner following the 1968 student demonstrations in Yugoslavia against the communist government in Belgrade. Xhaka’s brother Taulant plays for Albania’s national side.

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The Football Association of Serbia (FSS) had revealed it would complain to Fifa about Shaqiri’s boots – which bear the flag of Kosovo – and the display of “several controversial flags” during Friday night’s match in Kaliningrad.

However, a statement from Fifa on Monday confirmed that Xhaka and Shaqiri had been fined 10,000 Swiss francs (£7,632) each and Stephan Lichtsteiner 5,000 Swiss francs (£3,816), with all three also given warnings, having “infringed the Fifa disciplinary code for unsporting behaviour contrary to the principles of fair play.”