“It’s a sad day for Brazilian soccer”
Rio declares three days of mourning:
BRAZIL - Rio de Janeiro has declared three days of mourning as investigators seek to determine the cause of the fire that killed 10 teenage footballers at the training centre of the city’s Flamengo football club on Friday morning.
Cláudio Castro, the vice governor of Rio de Janeiro state, said authorities were looking at the possibility of a short circuit in an air conditioning unit.
Samuel Barbosa, a 16-yearold player who survived the fire, told Globo TV news that a lot of smoke had filled the dorm. “Most didn’t make it because there was so much fire,” he said.
The city said in a statement that the area burned was registered for parking, not as a dormitory, and that an investigation into the licensing process was underway. Beatriz Busch, the state’s public health secretary, said three other players had been injured in the fire. Two were in stable condition, but the third was critically ill. Several people who appeared to be relatives entered the complex on Friday night without speaking to reporters. Some were crying. “We are distraught,” Flamengo’s president, Rodolfo Landim, said outside the complex. “This is the worst tragedy to happen to the club in its 123 years. “The most important thing right now is to minimize the suffering of these families.” Rio’s mayor, Marcelo Crivella, ordered three days of mourning, while Brazil’s president, Jair Bolsonaro, lamented the fire had taken “the young lives at the beginning of pursuing their professional dreams”. Latin America’s largest nation suffers from shoddy infrastructure, often exacerbated by lax oversight of construction and endemic corruption. Sebastião Rodrigues, the uncle of one of the players who died, 15-year-old Samuel Thomas Rosa, said his nephew never complained about the conditions. “He never told me anything bad about the training centre,” he said. “He liked the environment and his teammates there.” The identities of those killed were not released but their names emerged through family members and survivors. Passion for football runs deep in Brazil, and many of the world’s best players and top officials expressed condolences. “It’s a sad day for Brazilian soccer,” tweeted Pelé, the country’s most famous player. Chapecoense, a team in southern Brazil that lost 22 players in a plane crash in 2016, said on Twitter: “We are extremely sad and shaken by the news of the fire.” Flamengo is perhaps the most famous club in the country, with an estimated 40 million fans nationwide. Supporters are so attached to their academy team that players have a motto for them: “Flamengo makes legends at home.”
(The Guardian)