Monday, April 23, 2018

Fratria ultras of Spartak of Moscú (Russia)

Fratia is an ultra russian group that supports the Spartak Moscow in all its sports facets, especially in football and ice hockey. It was created on October 28, 2005 and is the largest organized fan group of the Spartak with around ten thousand fans.8 They are very popular in Russia for their pyrotechnic games and their tifos before matches of Spartak in Luzhniki and in the new Otkrytiye Arena stadium.The Fratria movement was created on October 28, 2005 as an organized group of fans of the Moscow Spartak Sports Society, but its main actions are focused on the football section. The group quickly became very popular in Russia due to their elaborate tifos and fireworks games before the Spartak matches, first in Luzhniki and then in the new Otkrytiye Arena. Fratria pays special attention to the Spartak matches against their rivals in Moscow or against Zenit, for their rivalry with St. Petersburg. Fratria starred in a march in Moscow in 2012 to protest the assassination of a Spartak fan by a group of Chechens. Members of Fratria blamed the authorities for not finding the killers. At the march banners such as "Russia for the Russians" and "Moscow for the Muscovites" could be read.In November 2013, Fratria was accused of displaying a Nazi flag in a Russian cup match in Yaroslavl before the Shinnik, but the group denied its authorship. As a result, the Russian Federation imposed a penalty of two matches behind closed doors to Spartak. In 2014, Fratria announced on her website that she would keep five minutes of silence at the start of a derby against Dinamo Moscow for the murder of a young Spartak fan at the hands of an Uzbek nationalist outside Moscow. Several members of Fratria were involved in the serious clashes between Russian and English fans in Marseille during Euro 2016.Related image

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