
Social media firms have gone backwards in tackling online hate, says Kick It Out chairman
But that's, grimly, how it always is. Concerned that black players will be singled out for blame. Not with a legitimate critique of their performances, but with toxicity and racism.
And now Kick It Out is working with the Football Association to support Jess Carter after the England defender spoke out over the abuse she has been targeted with throughout the Women's European Championship.
The players want social media firms to do more, but Mr Bhandari, the Kick It Out chairman, is concerned by their limited approach to the scourge of online hate.
"The social media companies need to do far more," he told Sky News. "They've actually gone backwards over the last four or five years, not forwards. It's got worse on social media, not better.
"And they need to provide us with the tools to help keep us safe and to remove some of this toxicity from the platforms. They're just not doing enough.
"I would say that X is the worst. It has become no-holds-barred.
"And with Instagram, it is much more in the direct messaging, and I think there needs to be much more done there to protect people from those messages."
Meta, which owns Instagram, did not reply to a request for comment.
There was no response from an email sent to X's press email address.
1:17
LinkedIn indicated that X's UK managing director Jonathan Lewis's account had seen a request for comment, but there was no response.
On Friday, Mr Lewis and Premier League club Burnley were celebrating a new partnership in an announcement that made no mention of the abuse that many players across the world face on X.
The hope is that the Online Safety Act will lead to social media firms implementing the safety tools required of them.
Mr Bhandari said: "They have to be enforced by law enforcement against individual perpetrators, and also the regulatory parts need to be forced against the social media companies to force them to do the things that they need to do."
Grimly familiar situation
The FA reported the abuse suffered by Carter to police, and the hope is for speedy action because this is a grimly familiar situation.
After the men's Euros final in 2021, Marcus Rashford, Jadon Sancho and Bukayo Saka were racially abused after missing penalties in the shootout defeat to Italy.
While players have been taking a knee against racism in men's and women's games, the Lionesses feel that is no longer enough at these Euros.
They will stand instead before the semi-final with Italy because they say a new approach is needed to tackle racism.
Carter didn't just face racism around the quarter-final that England won on penalties after fighting back from 2-0 down against Sweden here in Zurich.
She has been subjected to abuse throughout the Euros.
"I'm really feeling for Jess and what's sad is that this is shocking, but not surprising," Mr Bhandari said.
"I watch every England game, at every tournament, with the fear that after the match, there's going to be abuse of a black player using the spurious basis of performance as an excuse to justify unjustifiable racism. All racism is unjustifiable.
"The fact that someone's had a good or bad game in your opinion does not justify that kind of racist abuse."

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South Wales Guardian
14 minutes ago
- South Wales Guardian
Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett put England in charge after Ben Stokes' five-for
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Glasgow Times
14 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett put England in charge after Ben Stokes' five-for
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Daily Mail
14 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
England produce their best day of the summer to pull ahead in fourth Test against India as they push for series victory
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In the final session alone, England scored 148, and if a little gloss was removed by the demise of Crawley, caught at slip by KL Rahul off Ravindra Jadeja for 84, and of Duckett, edging a cut off the debutant Anshul Kamboj for an even more agonising 94, then they will tell themselves that another day's batting should put this game beyond their opponents. On a pitch that remains true, it ought not to be beyond them. The conditions, for sure, favoured England. The ball did all sorts in the morning under grey skies, when the average swing of 1.6 degrees was higher than it has been at any point during the summer. Then, soon after Crawley and Duckett began the reply, the clouds began to part, as if the ECB were now controlling the weather. And yet that could only partially explain why England outplayed India, who began by serving up an array of freebies on Duckett's pads - 'rubbish', their former coach Ravi Shastri called it up in the commentary box, speaking on behalf of a nation. It didn't help that Shubman Gill handed the new ball to the nervy Kamboj ahead of Mohammed Siraj, India's leading wicket-taker in the series. Sensing his chance, Duckett took 12 off Kamboj's first over, and helped himself to the first 26 runs of the innings. Crawley, meanwhile, embarked on his best Test knock since destroying Australia here two years ago, a vindication - the management will argue - of his continued selection ahead of the return Ashes this winter. 'I always want more from myself, and I certainly have for the last year or so,' he said. 'I owe it to myself to have a few good more performances. It makes days like today worth it.' For his part, Duckett rediscovered the touch that had yielded his fourth-innings masterpiece in the series opener at Headingley, only to scratch an old wound by falling short with three figures his for the taking. Another wicket or two before stumps might have redressed the ledger, but Ollie Pope survived some jumpy moments, and with Joe Root ushered England to 225 for two, a deficit of 133. With Bumrah enduring a rare off day, India looked mainly toothless. Shardul Thakur went at seven an over, Siraj at nearly six, and Kamboj at just under five. Even Jadeja's normally precise left-arm darts were milked at 4.62. It was no recipe for any kind of control. There were just five maidens out of 46, and four came from Bumrah. The first half of the day had belonged to England, too, as Stokes continued to harry India in what has turned into the bowling summer of his life. The initial breakthrough was supplied in the second over by Jofra Archer, whose expertise against left-handers earned him the wicket of Jadeja, well caught by Harry Brook low to his right at second slip to end a sequence of four half-centuries. 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And when Root persuaded Stokes to review a faint glove down the leg side from Bumrah off Archer, India had lost their last five for 44. They are not out of this game, but all this has made their life much harder.