Polish rugby fans "welcomed" their Ukrainian guests with aggressive banners demanding the city of Lviv back and threatening to kill Bandera followers. Despite the vice mayor's order, security forces refused to take any action, newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza reported.
"The banner contained ultra-rights slogans and called for violence. We had to intervene," he said.
But the law enforcement, however, rejected to fulfill the order due to the crowd's aggressive attitudes.
Woman Factor and Alleged Reasons for Fury
Where men fail, women succeed: five brave girls dismantled the banners despite the fans turning the air blue.
RUGBY: POLSKA — Ukraina 09.05.2015 ''Lwów odzyskamy, banderowców ubijemy'' pic.twitter.com/SL0iryHGUF
— Shark (@WSH1906) 10 мая 2015
Lviv, the city fans pledged to take back, belonged to Poland, later to Austria and returned to Poland after World War I. Nazis captured Lviv at the beginning of World War II. The Soviet Army liberated it in 1944 and the city joined Soviet Ukraine.
Stepan Bandera, whose followers were addressed by the fans, was a Ukrainian nationalist of World War II. His grouping OUN-UPA (Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists — Ukrainian Insurgent Army) collaborated with the Nazis and is blamed for the murder of up to 130,000 Poles by Warsaw.
Ukraine won the match 20 — 17.