Argentina
Argentina captain Lionel Messi leads the celebrations after his team's 1-0 Copa America final win over Colombia on Sunday AFP

The French Football Federation (FFF) said on Tuesday it plans to lodge a complaint with FIFA and take legal action after racist chants from members of Argentina's Copa America winning team.

FFF president Philippe Diallo "condemned with the greatest firmness the unacceptable racist and discriminatory remarks made against players of the France team".

The chants were heard during a live video posted on social media by Chelsea and Argentina midfielder Enzo Fernandez from the team bus in the wake of the Copa victory over Colombia in Miami on Sunday.

Some players, including Fernandez, sing a chant dating back to the 2022 World Cup final that Argentina won against France.

The song targets France's star striker Kylian Mbappe and includes homophobic insults.

"Faced with the seriousness of these shocking remarks, contrary to the values of sport and human rights, the president of the FFF decided to directly challenge his Argentine counterpart and FIFA and to file a legal complaint for racial and discriminatory offensive remarks," an FFF statement read.

Fernandez's Chelsea team-mate Wesley Fofana criticised the video on social media.

"Football in 2024: racism without a complex," the French international said on X, formerly known as Twitter.

French Sports Minister Amelie Oudea-Castera also called for world football's governing body FIFA to take action.

"Pathetic. Behaviour all the more unacceptable because it is repeated," Oudea-Castera wrote on X.

"FIFA: a reaction?" she added.

Argentina and France have maintained a heated rivalry since the South Americans last 16 elimination to eventual champions France at the 2018 World Cup.

Two years ago, the FFF also filed a complaint against racist comments on social media.