
Chelsea
chairman Bruce Buck has written an open letter to fans condemning the
actions of "a few mindless individuals" at some of their recent matches.
The club and the Metropolitan Police have opened investigations after
alleged racist abuse was directed at Manchester City forward Raheem Sterling
during the match at Stamford Bridge on December 8.
The Chelsea supporter accused has apologised for his behaviour, but denied
he used racist language.
UEFA is also investigating "alleged racist incidents" at Chelsea's Europa
League fixture with Vidi in Hungary last week.
In his letter on the club's official website, Buck urged supporters to rally
together to stamp out discrimination.
He said: "After recent events, I wanted to take this opportunity to reach
out to our community and fans to condemn the actions of a few mindless
individuals at some of our recent matches.
"These actions are unacceptable and unwelcome both in our club and in
football.
"A deeply unpleasant but vocal minority which refuses to join us in the 21st
century has shamed the great majority of our decent, well-behaved fans.
"We have been carrying out our own investigations into these events while
cooperating fully with authorities.
"We have already suspended four individuals pending investigations and will
continue to take the strongest possible action against anybody found to have
been using discriminatory words or gestures. But we must all come together
to stamp out these ugly scenes.
The 700-word letter outlined Chelsea's inclusion and diversity work,
including the Say No to Anti-Semitism campaign launched in January and the
joint campaign, launched in 2010 in collaboration with anti-discrimination
group Kick It Out to "try and rid the game of the Y-word".
Buck, who has been chairman throughout the 15-year ownership of Russian
billionaire Roman Abramovich, added: "The message from Mr Abramovich, our
directors, our coaches, our players and our hundreds of staff is simple -
this is a club open to everybody.
"We are committed and determined to be a force for good and not a symbol of
society's wider problems.
"Clearly, there remains a way to go on this journey, but we will not rest
until we have eliminated all forms of discrimination from our club.
"If you do not share these values, this is not the club for you. We are
determined to win this battle, but we need the backing and action of those
who share the principles of this great club."