Heightened security at Wembley for England-France clash

England players and fans to demonstrate their solidarity with the visitors

The full France squad, with the bereaved Lassana Diarra in their number, will travel to London today before the friendly against England at Wembley united in defiance in the aftermath of the terrorist atrocities in Paris.

Diarra lost his cousin Asta Diakité among the more than 130 people killed in Friday’s attacks across the French capital while the former Arsenal and Chelsea midfielder was playing for his country at the Stade de France.

The venue was targeted by suicide bombers, with three bombs detonated outside the arena. It has since emerged the sister of another member of Didier Deschamps' 23-man squad, Antoine Griezmann, escaped unhurt from the Bataclan theatre where at least 89 people were killed.

The France squad, who returned to Clairefontaine at around 4am on Saturday morning and trained behind closed doors over the weekend, were not consulted by the France Football Federation over whether Tuesday's friendly at Wembley should proceed. However, with some in the party having indicated in private their concern at playing the match, there was an acknowledgement any players who felt they could not travel to London would be permitted to drop out.

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A stand

As it is, Diarra and Griezmann, who each played in Friday's 2-0 win over Germany, have opted to take a stand in a game Theresa May has stressed should go ahead as a sign "the terrorists will not win".

There will be heightened security at Wembley, with supporters urged to arrive earlier than usual given stringent searches and a more visible police presence than usual.

The FA has been in lengthy discussions with the government and Metropolitan police over the weekend and, while there is no specific intelligence to suggest this game is under any greater threat, they are taking prudent and appropriate measures to reassure fans in what is expected to be a crowd in excess of 70,000.

“It is the intention that the match will still go ahead,” said May after the home secretary had chaired a meeting of the government’s emergency committee on Sunday. “We are in absolute solidarity with the people of France and, together, we need to show that the terrorists will not win and we will defeat them.”

To that end, England’s players have also spoken to the FA about paying their own tribute before the kick-off. Nine of Deschamps’ squad play at English clubs, and another four have played in the Premier League.

Their sentiment has been shared by supporters: the words to La Marseillaise will be displayed within Wembley for home fans to sing during the anthems. The Wembley arch will be lit up in the red, white and blue of the French tricolour – as it has been since Friday – while screens outside the arena will display the French motto "Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité".

There have been calls, too, for the FA to make the game “a symbol of friendship and fraternity” by donating profits to charity, with more than 14,000 signatures already added to an online petition for proceeds to be given to the French Red Cross and Médécins sans Frontières.

While the occasion will inevitably be emotionally charged, Jacques Lambert, the head of the organising committee for Euro 2016 to be staged in France, has called for "calm heads" as he, the FFF president, Noel le Graet, Uefa and the French government prepare to work further on security issues before next summer's tournament.

The finals will have 24 teams playing across 10 venues, with stadiums, training camps and team hotels technically falling under the responsibility of the tournament organisers and, under an agreement struck in September, the state assuring security around those locations.

Guardian Service