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Madrid plans �robust� security for Champions League final

By The Assam Tribune

MADRID, May 30: Madrid will deploy an unprecedented number of police and security personnel for Saturday�s all-English Champions League final, and use a drone for the first time to monitor fan activity.

With Spain�s terror alert set at its second-highest level, Spanish authorities have also banned trucks weighing over 3.5 tonnes from driving near the Wanda Metropolitano stadium which will host the match between Liverpool and Tottenham deemed �high risk�.

Trucks will also be barred from the vicinity of the two fan zones that will be set up in the city centre.

�We will have a very, very robust security apparatus in place to try to ensure everything takes place normally and everyone can enjoy (the match),� the director general of Spain�s National Police, Francisco Pardo, told a news conference on Thursday to outline the security measures for the game.

Some 4,700 police officers and private security guards will be deployed for the match, more than the nearly 4,000 used for last year�s Copa Libertadores final between Argentine rivals River Plate and Boca Juniors in Madrid, a match that was also declared �high risk� by authorities.

�This will probably be the biggest deployment to guarantee security which we will carry out at a sporting event� in Madrid, said Pardo.

Police will for the first time deploy a drone to provide aerial monitoring to prevent fan trouble at a sporting event, which will work in coordination with police helicopters, he added.

The authorities expect around 32,000 ticket-holding fans from both teams to attend the match at the 68,000-capacity stadium, and thousands more to come to Madrid without a ticket from Britain as well as southern Spain and neighbouring Portugal, which have large English expat communities.

British police are sharing intelligence with their Spanish counterparts and will be in Madrid to assist in the security operation.

�Fans who choose to get involved in disorder should be warned that they can expect to be arrested and dealt with robustly by the Spanish police,� said the head of the London Metropolitan Police operation at the final, superintendent Nick Collins.

While there is no great history of rivalry between the two sides, six Liverpool supporters were arrested in Barcelona for public disorder on the eve of their meeting in the Champions League semifinal first leg.

Videos posted to social media showed a Liverpool supporter lifting a man selling beers into the water of a fountain in the city centre as surrounding fans laughed and cheered. � AFP

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