Australian Football Players Don Blackface, Dress Up As Venus And Serena Williams

Days in Australia since last blackface incident: 0.

Another racist incident is making headlines in Australia where three football players dressed in blackface for end-of-season celebrations, commonly referred to as “Mad Monday.”

The trio, who play for a local Australian Rules Football (AFL) club in the state of Tasmania, dressed as tennis champions Serena and Venus Williams and Kenyan-born AFL player Aliir Aliir.

Photographs of the costumes surfaced on Facebook in Australia on Thursday, drawing immediate outrage from social media users.

“Some Australians still have no clue what is considered racist,” Twitter user Francis Gonzalez tweeted. “This Mad Monday “costume” is clearly racist. And I’m a person who is fed up with today’s over-the-top political correctness.”

Some Australians still have no clue what is considered racist. This Mad Monday "costume" is clearly racist. And I'm a person who is fed up with today's over-the-top political correctness. pic.twitter.com/oWPR0WjeUx

— Francis Gonzalez (@fgonzalez_) September 19, 2018

The newspaper doubled down on its support for cartoonist Mark Knight by reprinting the picture of Williams on its front page the following day.

Oh look: a mere week after that racist cartoon of Serena Williams, another blackface scandal hits the Australian press bc white dudes decided to "dress up" like her. Meanwhile, three Aboriginal people died in custody in the same time period. What a nation of racist slow learners.

— Celeste Liddle (@Utopiana) September 19, 2018

The latest racist incident involving players from the Penguin Football Club has left many Australians setting their “days without blackface incident in Australia” boards back to zero again, as many Twitter users quipped.

guys... I'm afraid we have to set the "days without a blackface incident in Australia" board back to zero, again

— Giovanni Torre (@GiovanniTorre) September 19, 2018

Sets “days without embarrassingly tone-deaf blackface incident in Australia” counter back to 0.

— Mark Watson (@tnimark) September 19, 2018

Australia: Another day, another blackface incident

— ainsindahouse (@ainsindahouse) September 19, 2018

In a statement to HuffPost, Penguin Football Club said it was not aware the players “intended to dress in this manner” and that their behavior was “unacceptable in this day and age”.

While the trio have been reprimanded, the club insisted that their “actions were never intended to be racist in any way” and “all they meant to do was dress as one of their sporting idols”.

The players have apologised, and the league said it has put in place strategies “to ensure that this completely unacceptable behavior never happens again”.

AFL Tasmania, the state’s recognized AFL organization, told HuffPost that it vehemently disapproved of the behavior.

“We will be working with the league and club to get more information and to see how we can assist in providing education for the players,” CEO Trisha squires said.

Speaking to the Australian Broadcasting Corp, Aboriginal activist Michael Mansell said the football club had to take “responsibility for any racist, sexist or offensive behavior”.

“People enjoy playing their sports, but they are entertaining in front of the public and therefore they need to acknowledge the values that the public expects them to adhere to,” he said. “This sort of racist behavior is offensive to most reasonable people.”

Thursday’s incident isn’t the first time an AFL club has made headlines for dressing up in blackface.

In 2016 players from a suburban club in Melbourne dressed up as various African-American singers at a party where they were encouraged to dress as their favorite recording artists.

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