A display was unveiled in the vacant standing section of the stadium where the Green Brigade are usually housed at Celtic Park.
The rail seating section has been empty in recent months after Celtic banned members of the group from attending matches.
Banish the traitors, end the bans! pic.twitter.com/kxHoitoJLG
— Proud Huddle CSC (@CelticCSCPride) February 1, 2026
However, a display in the stadium called for the ban to be ended with a huge tifo slamming three key figures at Celtic.
Playing on popular BBC show The Traitors, the banner read: “Banish the Traitors. End the bans.”
The display depicted chief executive Michael Nicholson, chief financial officer Chris McKay and head of safety, security and operations Mark Hargreaves.
The trio were mocked up in cloaks worn by Traitors on the hit TV show.
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The match against Falkirk marks the 20th match that the Green Brigade have been locked out. The ban was implemented on November 7 last year.
Discussing the Green Brigade ban, Paul Quigley of Celtic Fans Collective said: “I do think there is a vindictiveness to it,” Quigley said.
“My personal view is that the Green Brigade have specifically been targeted and been banned because they are one of the most vocal and visual elements of the campaign against the board. Ditto the fan media, who I think have also been locked out because of their willingness through their own avenues to criticise the board, and there has been an attempt to send a message that that will not be tolerated.
“The knock-on effect of it is it means that there is not a noisy corner of the stadium to organise and be able to visually protest against the board at matches, and fan media do not have the opportunity to ask questions of the manager or whoever is sat in a press conference about how the board conducts itself.
“I think that it probably stems from a degree of pettiness and vindictiveness, but it serves a really practical purpose in protecting them from those questions and that transparency that they just seem to be allergic to.”