Football fans, who try to enter matches in England and Wales without tickets, face a ban without a ticket after cleaning the House of Commons of the law.
The bill enters a football match unauthorized for a criminal offense. Following a punishment for that crime, a court will ban anyone from participating in any professional football matches.
Guilty fans will also be fined up to £ 1,000.
The draft law still needs to be passed by the House of Lords, but this law is likely to be enacted as it is supported by both the government and the conservatives.
A match may involve tailgating a fan with a ticket through obstacles in immoral entry, but this may include forced entry, bribing stadium employees, or using deception to enter – such as copying a member of employees.
The draft law comes after a disorder in the Euro 2020 final in the Wambali in 2021, when thousands of fans enter the stadium.
An FA-commissioned report led by Baronic Lewis Casey said that the disorder could lead to death and a match may be recommended to commit a criminal offense.
The remedies will cover fans who try to enter the campus – such as the first ticket check on the run to the stadium – but who fail to make it in a match.
But this will not apply to fans who enter a match with a fake ticket, they believe that they are real, or enter a match with a valid ticket, which they were not eligible to use.
It will not stop not without tickets but will not stop with the valid reasons of entering matches like employees, journalists and emergency employees.
Labri MP Lesi Farsworth, who proposed the law, said it was necessary because the lack of current results means “ticket -free persons can try to get admission in a match and unless they give up or really success”.
The MP of Amber Valley at Derbyshire highlighted the “uncomfortable” experience of his two friends, which were in the finals of the Euro 2020 in Vambali, which he said that he was again distracted from participating in England’s game.
He said that the intention was for measures to implement this year’s football season.
But the conservative backbane Sir Christopher Chop criticized the change, stating that it put the trivial law at risk and the disorder in the Euro 2020 was a “united event”.
Security Minister Dan Jarvis said the problem was a recurring, stating the MPs that “forcible entry, tailgating, and so -called zibbing, not afflicted”.
He said: “Those involved are often aggressive, violent or threatening, and their actions may be crowded, blocked emergency exists and frightening situation for innocent fans.”
A similar bill was introduced during the last Parliament, but it failed to make it on the law of law before the general election.