• Uefa acts after anti-semitic chanting in Europa League game • Ten Spurs fans injured in Rome bar on night before match

This article is more than 7 years old

This article is more than 7 years old

Lazio have been given a suspended one-game stadium ban by Uefa after anti-semitic chanting by home fans in a Europa League game against Tottenham in November, Italian media reported on Friday.

Uefa was not available for comment but the Lazio president, Claudio Lotito, told Italian radio that the suspended ban, which will be enforced if a similar incident takes place, was a warning to his club's fans.

"For the fault of a few people we all must pay the penalty. But now there is no more joking," he said.

Tottenham have a large contingent of Jewish fans. Lazio supporters, well-known for their right-wing views, also unfurled a "Free Palestine" banner at the game.

Ten Spurs fans were injured when they were attacked in a Rome bar the night before the match.

Uefa has been accused of being too soft on racist incidents, with it being remarked that Denmark's Nicklas Bendtner was handed a bigger fine for displaying an advertising logo on his underpants at Euro 2012 than national federations have received for instances of racism.

Tottenham have announced that the 18-year-old striker Souleymane Coulibaly has joined the Serie B side Grosseto on loan until the end of the season. The striker made his first-team debut in a friendly against Stevenage in July but is yet to break into the first team. Coulibaly was voted Ivory Coast's young player of the year in 2011 after scoring nine goals in four games at the Under-17s World Cup.