The ultras of OGC Nice have been accused of violence and racism this season. Incidents occurred in Paris and led to sanctions for supporters. The ultras of OGC Nice have negatively marked the spirits this season with their violent behavior. In a context where the club saves its place in Ligue 1, the attitude of the ultras of the Populaire Sud questions. Racist banners, player aggression, and beatings in the heart of Paris... This season, the ultras of OGC Nice have multiplied violent behaviors and chained sanctions. After a complicated season where the club narrowly avoided relegation, their attitude questions and the responses to adopt towards these increasingly violent supporters remain to be defined. The ultra is not a delinquent, it's someone who expresses their passion in a more significant way than others, insists Sacha Houlié, deputy of the Vienne and author of a report on stadium bans and supporterism. He operates a clear distinction between those called ultras and the authors of violence, including those that occurred in the 10th arrondissement of Paris on the eve of the Coupe de France final. In the night of May 21-22, a hundred supporters of OGC Nice invested the streets of the Canal Saint-Martin, vandalizing a bar and injuring seven people, including one seriously. The scene, of extreme violence, was filmed by passersby. What we saw in Paris is very clearly hooliganism, adds also Thierry Vincent, journalist for Blast and specialist of ultradroite. Hooliganism is characterized by violence, vandalism, and fighting... According to him, these violence must question certain profiles without stigmatizing the entire supporters: Some ultras are hooliganized and can be violent. The hooligan is above all a delinquent, and he must be treated as such. During this evening, the violent groups would have left in chanting: The BSN is still there, according to Nice Matin information. This chant has nothing anodyne since it refers to the previous association of supporters, dissolved in 2010 for its numerous violence. The current Populaire Sud was previously called the BSN (Brigade Sud Nice). The BSN was created in 1985 and quickly became known for its violence and racist acts, recalls Thierry Vincent. The group of supporters was then partly infiltrated by the extreme right: It's the case of the Bloc identitaire of Philippe Vardon, current general delegate of the party of Marion Maréchal NDLR, known also for having founded the political movement identitaire niçois Nissa Rebela. The deputy Sacha Houlié recalls also that the political coloration of the stand is rather to the extreme right, it's in the image of the political landscape of the city. From the time of the BSN, the Niçois culture is then at the heart of the identity of the ultras of OGC Nice, who sing in Niçois or chant mentalita nissarda during matches. The BSN was dissolved in 2010 for repeated acts of violence and racist behavior in the stands. However, the controversies have not ceased since then with the Populaire Sud. In an article published last year on a banner deployed during a match