Osasuna has been informed, through the media, of the sanction proposal by the Comisión Antiviolencia following the training held at the El Sadar stadium on May 22. The organization proposes closing the stadium for 2 months and a fine of 200,000 euros for the entity. Given that the team was playing for relegation in the last match of the competition against Getafe C. F. away from home and that their fans would not be able to travel to the capital as the stadium of the local team was under renovation, the entity decided to open the doors to the public in the last training of the season. Around 5,500 people attended without any type of altercation or incident occurring. That, which should be a priority for any public institution, seems not to be the case in this occasion. The club considers that the sanction proposal is unjust, disproportionate from all points of view and far from the facts that occurred. The entity does not share, in any way, the attempt by the authorities to blame the clubs for the individual behavior of certain fans. The proposal known seems to assume an impossible standard of responsibility in any multitudinous event, confusing the obligation to adopt preventive measures with an obligation to guarantee the absolute absence of any individual incident. The training was organized adopting the necessary security and prevention measures, including the hiring of private security and the provision of corresponding medical services, with the aim of ensuring that thousands of fans could show their support for the team on a day of special significance. The proposal punishes not only the club, but also thousands of members and fans who lived that day in a civic, respectful and passionate way. It is incomprehensible that an act that represented the massive support of an entire fan base for their team could lead to a measure as extraordinary as closing the stadium for two months and a fine of 200,000 euros. But beyond the gravity of this specific proposal, Osasuna cannot hide its growing concern about the treatment it has been receiving repeatedly over the past few years. The constant accumulation of files, sanctions and sanction proposals against our entity is generating among our members, fans and workers a feeling that is increasingly difficult to ignore: that Osasuna is subject to a level of surveillance, scrutiny and punishment that is hardly comparable to other areas of Spanish football. It is legitimate to ask why behaviors that in other scenarios seem to receive very different responses lead, when they affect Osasuna, to proposals of extraordinary severity that directly threaten the club and its entire social mass. Osasuna is a century-old entity that represents hundreds of thousands of Navarrese and Navarras. A club that has collaborated permanently with the authorities, that has invested human and economic resources in security, prevention and care of its fans.