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Jose Mourinho 'ashamed' over racist abuse by Chelsea fans in Paris

Manager Jose Mourinho of Chelsea attends a Chelsea Press Conference at Cobham Training Ground on February 6, 2015
Image: Jose Mourinho: Says Chelsea are disgusted

Jose Mourinho says he feels "ashamed" about the incident in Paris in which a man was racially abused by Chelsea fans.

The Premier League club suspended a further two men on Friday, bringing the total to five fans banned from Stamford Bridge as part of the ongoing investigation into the incident on Tuesday night.

A commuter, identified in media reports as French-Mauritanian Souleymane S, was blocked from entering a train by what appeared to be a group of fans travelling to the Parc des Princes for the Champions League match against Paris Saint-Germain.

We feel ashamed but maybe we shouldn't because I refuse to be connected with these people.
Jose Mourinho

Mourinho said he feels "ashamed" by the incident, but insists he remains proud to be Chelsea manager after distancing the club from the supporters who racially abused the man.

"We feel ashamed but maybe we shouldn't because I refuse to be connected with these people," Mourinho said.

"I'm connected with Chelsea and so many good things this club defends and represents. I left Chelsea in 2007 and I couldn't wait to be back. It's not because of people like this that I wanted to be back.

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Arsene Wenger gives his view on the racist incident involving Chelsea fans in a Paris metro station

"I felt ashamed when I knew what happened, but I repeat, I'm a proud Chelsea manager because I know what this club is. These people don't represent the club."

The club has invited the victim to come to Stamford Bridge to watch a match, and Mourinho supports the idea.

"I think he would watch not only the game, but he would feel what Chelsea is. At this moment he will have the wrong idea of what Chelsea Football Club is," he said.

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Souleymane S, the man being racially abused by Chelsea fans at a train station in Paris, has confirmed he intends to press charges

"I don't know if the gentleman loves football. But the miserable people who had this action with him, this is not Chelsea - they are not Chelsea. It's the owner, the board, the manager, the players, the people who work here. It's also the true Chelsea supporter.

"So yes I support the idea, even if I don't know if he loves football or not." 

Asked how the squad had responded to the incident, he said: "They had the same reaction as we all had. I had a squad at Chelsea where it was around 12 or 14 players with African nationality or connection. 

"This dressing room - even without me as manager - I am sure this dressing room was always one with big principles of equality, not just about race, but religion. They reacted with disappointment, condemning the situation and supporting the gentleman."

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