Jamaica Gleaner

Police chief, others removed over soccer disaster

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MALANG (AP): AN INDONESIAN police chief and nine elite officers were removed from their posts on Monday, and 18 others were being investigat­ed for responsibi­lity in the firing of tear gas inside a soccer stadium that set off a stampede, killing at least 125 people, officials said.

Distraught family members were struggling to comprehend the loss of their loved ones, including 17 children, at the match in East Java’s Malang city that was attended only by hometown Arema FC fans. The organiser had banned supporters of the visiting team, Persebaya Surabaya, because of Indonesia’s history of violent soccer rivalries.

The disaster on Saturday night was among the deadliest ever at a sporting event.

Arema players and officials laid wreaths on Monday in front of the stadium.

“We came here as a team asking forgivenes­s from the families impacted by this tragedy, those who lost their loves ones or the ones still being treated in the hospital,” head coach Javier Roca said.

On Monday night, about a thousand soccer fans dressed in black shirts held a candleligh­t vigil at a soccer stadium in Jakarta’s satellite city of Bekasi to pray for the victims of the disaster.

Witnesses said some of the 42,000 Arema fans ran onto the pitch in anger on Saturday after the team was defeated 3-2, its first loss at home against Persebaya in 23 years. Some threw bottles and other objects at players and soccer officials. At least five police vehicles were toppled and set ablaze outside the stadium.

But most of the deaths occurred when riot police, trying to stop the violence, fired tear gas, including in the stands, triggering a disastrous stampede of fans making a panicked, chaotic run for the exits. Most of the 125 people who died were trampled or suffocated. The victims included two police officers.

 ?? AP ?? Soccer fans chant slogans during a candleligh­t vigil for supporters of Arema FC who died in Saturday’s stampede in Medan, North Sumatra, Indonesia, on Monday, October 3.
AP Soccer fans chant slogans during a candleligh­t vigil for supporters of Arema FC who died in Saturday’s stampede in Medan, North Sumatra, Indonesia, on Monday, October 3.

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