A petition calling for racists to be banned from football matches has surpassed a million signatures.

The petition was created on Monday (12 July) by Shaista Aziz, Amna Abdullatif and Huda Jawad amid the racist abuse levelled at some of England’s footballers.

Marcus Rashford, Bukayo Saka and Jadon Sancho faced abuse on social media after missing penalties at the Euro 2020 final.

The petition calls for the Football Association (FA) and Government to work together to ban “all those who have carried out racist abuse, online or offline, from all football matches in England for life”.

News and Star: The trio are avid football fans but say they have experienced racism and misogyny at matches (Huda Jawad/PA)The trio are avid football fans but say they have experienced racism and misogyny at matches (Huda Jawad/PA)

The trio of campaigners, who call themselves The Three Hijabis due to their heritage and dress, have seen their petition go viral.

“To go over one million… we feel validated in our resistance to racism and that what we have been able to articulate is the sentiment that is held nationwide,” Ms Jawad, a feminist and anti-racism activist, told the PA news agency.

“This is not our petition – this is the nation speaking and saying this is not okay and enough is enough.

“It’s not about just educating people and having a softly-softly approach – this is the point where we are very clear about our red lines.”

Ms Abdullatif added: “I hope (the petition’s success is) like a hug to these players to say that we really care about you, you’ve made us really proud.”

The three women know each other through activism but are all avid football fans and met up for the first time since the UK’s coronavirus lockdown to watch England face Ukraine earlier this month.

All three said they have experienced being made to feel unwelcome while watching football as a result of their race and gender.

“When I would go and see England play in Wembley, I remember very vividly being terrified,” said Ms Aziz, a journalist and Labour councillor.

“I remember one particular match, I actually went to the steward at half time and begged him ‘please, can you let me sit with the opposition?’

“I’m born and raised in this country, I’m from this country, I support England, but felt that I needed to get out of the English half.”

“But I still go because I’m a very stubborn and awkward git – as I call myself – and I refuse to let people minimize my life.”

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Three Hijabis walk into a bar to watch the Three Lions thrash Ukraine. What an incredible evening and an absolutely brilliant win by a magnificent England team! Well done, lads! A thread on the importance of an anti-racist, inclusive <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/England?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#England</a> ⚽️ team & why <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/RepresentationMatters?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#RepresentationMatters</a> <a href="https://t.co/ZMSOE2KyHq">pic.twitter.com/ZMSOE2KyHq</a></p>— Shaista Aziz 💙 (@shaistaAziz) <a href="https://twitter.com/shaistaAziz/status/1411621496330592256?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 4, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

The temperament of Gareth Southgate’s England team had given the three fans encouragement the football was moving forward.

“The squad has shown us something else… a completely inspiring vision of what young people can achieve, what a diverse group of people can achieve and what met young men can be,” said Ms Abdullatif.

“They don’t have to be misogynistic, they don’t have to be racist.”

“We are at a moment… perhaps what we can all do is take our example from the team.

“This is all on us, we all have a role to play, we can all make a difference… if you don’t make that change, nothing will change for the greater good.”

The petition can be viewed here.