Soccer-FIFA bans vuvuzelas from World Cup stadiums


FILE PHOTO: A vendors plays Vuvuzelas while people in Abidjan are getting excited as Ivory Coast gears up to host the Africa Cup of Nations which begins on Saturday in Abidjan, Ivory Coast January 10, 2024. REUTERS/Luc Gnago/ File Photo

June 4 (Reuters) - Soccer fans ⁠looking to bring the party to World Cup ⁠games will have to go without vuvuzelas, with FIFA ‌banning the plastic horns from venues in the U.S., Canada and Mexico in its stadium code of conduct.

Vuvuzelas, a horn made with a ​long plastic shell, are a staple of ⁠South African soccer matches ⁠and took the world by storm at the 2010 World ⁠Cup ‌in South Africa. But they have drawn criticism over their monotonous droning sound, often likened to ⁠a swarm of bees.

Along with vuvuzelas, whistles, air ​horns and other ‌excessively loud noise-making devices are prohibited from all ⁠16 World Cup ​venues, according to FIFA's stadium code of conduct.

Instruments that emit laser beams, laser pointers or similar emissions are also banned.

The ⁠list of prohibited items and behaviors goes ​on to state that body paint and body tattoos do not constitute as clothing. Streaking, flashing or removing clothing to ⁠reveal intimate body parts isalso prohibited.

FIFA has also banned spectators from bringing reusable water bottles into venues, citing safety concerns.

Attendees who violate the rules can be refused entry or ​removed from the stadium, the code ⁠says.

The expanded 48-team World Cup, hosted by the U.S., Canada and ​Mexico, runs from June 11 ‌to July 19. Mexico will open ​the tournament against South Africa on June 11.

(Reporting by Nicole Fernandes in Toronto, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

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