The former England striker urged the governing body to do more to battle racism after the Three Lions game against Bulgaria was suspended
The racist abuse directed at England players during Monday's game against Bulgaria proves UEFA's attempts to tackle the issue have had little effect, Ian Wright says.
And former England striker Wright praised the squad for their reaction, but urged European football's governing body to step up its fight against racism.
"The fact is there are a set of people there who have got no respect, they have no respect," he said on ITV. "UEFA are not doing nearly enough.
"I am so proud at what we are doing at the moment."
"You can feel physically sick, but you have to continue playing through that and what we are seeing now is you don't have to do that.
"It is a terrible day for Bulgarian people but it is a great day for tackling racism.
"What we are seeing is a set of fans who do not care and need educating.
"We have heard it for many years about walking off and it is something you do not want to do. You need your white players to do it together, when you see it happening it is powerful."
Ex-Manchester United midfielder Roy Keane also hit out at the bigotry on display, saying: "You feel sick to your stomach when you witness it. It is horrible. I feel physically sick listening to that."
England were 2-0 up when the game was stopped, with Marcus Rashford and Ross Barkley finding the net. Barkley added a third for Gareth Southgate's side after 32 minutes, before Raheem Sterling scored twice.