Hunt for the ‘uniformed officials’ who let the banner into the North End | OneFootball

Hunt for the ‘uniformed officials’ who let the banner into the North End | OneFootball

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·8 April 2026

Hunt for the ‘uniformed officials’ who let the banner into the North End

Gambar artikel:Hunt for the ‘uniformed officials’ who let the banner into the North End

The political and sporting climate in Santa Fe offers no respite. After the controversy over the appearance of a massive banner in the North stand during Colón’s last match against San Miguel, the province’s Ministry of Security stepped in, putting the spotlight on those who were supposed to guarantee control.

According to exclusive sources at «ADN Gol», the day’s news has two main angles that are shaking things up:

1. The sanction against Colón is non-negotiable: Despite attempts to soften the current measures, authorities have reportedly confirmed that changing the sanction is not in the immediate plans. The decision remains firm, making it clear that the banner incident only worsened the club’s situation before the oversight bodies. Therefore, supporters will continue to be prohibited from bringing in flags, drums, or any other items, and the investigation will continue thoroughly in an effort to determine who was responsible for getting that banner inside.

2. Internal investigation within the force: The most significant development in recent hours is the turn the investigation has taken. It is no longer only about identifying the fans who brought in the banner; now the focus is on the police response. Internally, a process has been launched to determine who allowed, through action or omission, a bundle of such magnitude to pass through the security rings in the North Popular stand right under the officers’ noses.


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Gambar artikel:Hunt for the ‘uniformed officials’ who let the banner into the North End

The detail that contradicts the narrative

While the official discourse in recent hours tried to downplay the incident, the weight of the evidence (including photographic material that circulated widely on social media and local media outlets) forced authorities to admit that the system failed. The question echoing through the Ministry’s hallways is clear: Was it negligence or collusion?

For now, secrecy is total, but the order is to push forward to the ultimate consequences in order to determine which officers were in charge of that specific entry area.

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here.

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