Several groups recently convened to create the Collectif Ultrà Paris (CUP) providing the club’s and the city’s authorities with a contact person should they ever reconsider their ban on the ultràs.
The question became which of the two groups represented Paris, was Paris. Never have I been to a game with such an atmosphere.
#PSGBayern ACTE 1...NOTRE DAME DE PARIS"ECRIVEZ L'HISTOIRE, ALLEZ CHERCHER LA VICTOIRE " @PSG_inside pic.twitter.com/N4StIGPL44, #PSGBayern Acte 6...TOUR EIFFEL " LA TOUR EIFFEL ILLUMINE PARIS LE PSG ILLUMINE L'EUROPE "@PSG_inside pic.twitter.com/77xgyGa0gj, #PSGBayern Acte 9... MUSEE DU LOUVRE " UNE VICTOIRE POUR L'HISTOIRE "@PSG_inside pic.twitter.com/ZdbOsYGtKa. Compared to other arenas, the Parc des Princes seemed stale and paralysed. France’s Departmental and Regional Prefects are now allowed to restrain freedom of movement. Data points included individuals’ profession, income, previous participation in demonstrations, marital status, driving license details and vehicle registration. Certain groups and fan associations preferred to be neutral towards the opposing – in the literal sense – section. Weeks later, he took the same action with regard to residents of Marseille. My son’s photo cost 16 euros and he’s already put it up in his bedroom wall! Marseille police said in … Beyond that, the Macron Presidency does not seem to have augured any change in state policy. Such threats intensified during Balladur’s time in office. At the Parc des Princes a new stand was established: In those days of red and blue brilliance, the Kop of Boulogne was more conservative and culturally homogeneous (which might be taken as a euphemism for right-wing and racist). The state of emergency declared by President Hollande on the evening of the attacks has been extended already over six times. Rather, they had fallen victim to what quickly became known as the Boutonnet doctrine. Similarly, in March 2010, Yann Lorence, a member of the neo-fascist Boulogne Boys, was killed in a factional dispute between PSG ultras. PSG Ultràs won’t forget October 2016 in a hurry. But on Oct 1, when PSG played Bordeaux at the Parc des Princes, the ultràs were back. The 1993 Alliot-Marie Law allowed for the establishment of stadium bans of up to five years, while the 1995 Law Pasqua permitted video surveillance of suspected hooligans. PSG Ultràs won’t forget October 2016 in a hurry. Over the following years the club’s crest and image were subtly changed into the plastic version most now associate with the three letters of PSG. The story of the Paris Ultràs is but one stanza in the evolving saga of modern football. Unsurprisingly, France’s National Association of Supporters (ASN) has declared a campaign of civil disobedience. During a state of emergency in which interior minister Charles Pasqua was pronouncing that the very future of France was at stake, the erosion of a few civil liberties could be overlooked. Communism crumbling completely changed the both maps and conceptions. A supporter could not review their ban in the courts.
During PSG’s first two decades fans tried to emulate the famous Kop at Anfield Road . . Read | Algeria’s Équipe FLN: the movement that used football to fight for freedom. Faced with continued bans on away fans, local supporters seem set on purchasing tickets for their travelling counterparts in the home end. Ultràs invest huge amounts of energy, time and money into creating banners for tifos, inventing chants and hymns for a matchday.
PSG president Robin Leproux, who had already attracted fans’ ire, developed the so-called “plan Leproux” meant to forever extinguish violence at the Parc des Princes. No guide, which was fine. Macron has refused to comment on the 2016 Lori Larrivé.