
Celtic Lifts Fan Group Ban After Safety Agreement
After months of dialogue, Celtic Football Club welcomed back 200 suspended fans just in time for the season's final stretch. The Green Brigade supporters group returns Saturday after accepting safety conditions.
Celtic Park will roar a little louder this weekend as the club welcomes back its passionate Green Brigade fan section after a five-month suspension.
The Glasgow club lifted the ban on roughly 200 supporters from the organized fan group, who'll return to their seats in the north curve for Saturday's home match against St Mirren. The timing couldn't be better, with crucial end-of-season games ahead, including a May 10th showdown against rivals Rangers.
The suspension began in early November after what the club described as "violent and threatening behavior" during an October match against Falkirk. When additional safety incidents occurred, Celtic extended the ban in December.
But something shifted this winter. Manager Martin O'Neill announced in February that talks between the club and the Green Brigade were making progress. That dialogue proved fruitful.

On March 27th, Glasgow City Council's Safety Advisory Group met with Celtic officials to discuss lifting the suspension. The group agreed, contingent on three straightforward conditions: following all stadium policies, cooperating with security operations, and accepting ongoing match reports to the Safety Advisory Group.
The Green Brigade accepted all terms unconditionally. Their yes arrived Tuesday, clearing the way for their return after missing multiple home games.
The Bright Side
This story shows what can happen when organizations choose conversation over confrontation. Instead of permanently banning passionate supporters, Celtic created a path back through clear expectations and accountability.
Interim chairman Brian Wilson captured the moment's significance simply: "A full and united Celtic Park can get behind the team at this crucial point in the season." With four home matches remaining, including potential title-deciding fixtures against Falkirk, Rangers, and Hearts, the club gets its complete atmosphere back when it matters most.
The reconciliation transforms what could have been a season-long rift into a story of accountability, dialogue, and second chances working exactly as they should.
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Based on reporting by BBC Sport
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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