The 32-year-old Ghanaian is now free to play in Sunday’s home game against Crotone after the ban was rescinded on appeal.
His decision to walkout of the pitch earn him a second yellow in addition to one-game ban from the Italian football federation — a punishment that was met with astonishment by many.
Muntari said after the ban was lifted on Friday: “I feel that someone has finally listened and heard me.
“The last few days have been very hard for me. I have felt angry and isolated,” he said in a statement issued by the international professional players’ association FIFPro.
“I was being treated like a criminal. How could I be punished when I was the victim of racism?”
There were no punishment for Cagliari, however, the league ruling that the racist chanting came from “about 10 people, or less than one percent of the sector” of the stadium.
Muntari added: “I hope my case can help so that other footballers do not suffer like me. I hope it can be a turning point in Italy and show the world what it means to stand up for your rights.
“This is an important victory to send a message that there’s no place for racism in football, or society in general.”
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