Dutch police have arrested two players from Polish soccer team Legia Warsaw following their Europa Conference League defeat against AZ Alkmaar, officials said, prompting an angry reaction in Poland.
Local police said they had detained a 28-year-old man from Serbia and a 33-year-old man from Portugal after Thursday's match, which ended in a 1-0 victory for the Dutch side, and that they were still in custody.
"After the match, two Legia Warsaw players injured AZ employees, who then needed medical care. These players have been detained on abuse charges," the police, the prosecutors and the city of Alkmaar said in a joint statement.
The players were pulled off the team coach and taken to a police station, police said.
The local authorities also claimed in their statement that other Legia players and officials also turned violent when they were held up inside the stadium, as police tried to escort Polish fans away from the grounds.
"Polish media are creating an image that players were the victim of police, but that's far from the truth. The players themselves were violent," the statement said.
Legia Warsaw fans had already attacked the police before the match, knocking one officer in riot gear unconscious as they violently stormed the stadium's entry gate.
TVP reported that Legia president and owner Dariusz Mioduski was hit in the face by police while several members of Legia staff were hit with batons.
The incident caused waves at the highest level in Poland.
"I have ordered the foreign ministry to take urgent diplomatic action to verify the events of the night," Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.
"Polish players and fans must be treated in accordance with the law."
Deputy Foreign Minister Pawel Jablonski later added that the Dutch ambassador to Poland has been summoned to the foreign ministry over the treatment of Polish citizens.
"The Polish government can't agree to discrimination against our citizens. Those responsible for this must face consequences. We count on cooperation with the competent authorities of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in this matter," Jablonski wrote on X.