Imperial Valley Press

Brazil soccer club promises compensati­on for fire victims

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RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — The Flamengo soccer club promised Monday to promptly pay financial compensati­on for the victims of a devastatin­g fire that killed 10 young academy players, but its president refused to answer any questions on the apparent lack of proper licensing for the training center.

At a news conference held at the public prosecutor’s office in Rio de Janeiro, Flamengo president Rodolfo Landim did not take any questions from reporters on why the dormitory was registered with the city as a parking lot and why it did not have all the required fire safety certificat­es.

The club had previously said licensing issues had “nothing to do” with last week’s fire.

But the speed at which the blaze spread — so fast that 10 teenage athletes could not escape — has led many Brazilians to question the quality and solidity of the structure and whether it was properly equipped to house people.

In several videos posted on social media, the youngsters can be seen playing around inside their sleeping areas, which appear to be small, white units containing several bunk beds each. Local media have been referring to the units as “housing containers.”

The club’s CEO, Reinaldo Belotti, over the weekend defended the “modular accommodat­ions” at the Ninho do Urubu training ground, telling the G1 news portal that the same units had been used by Brazil’s Olympic soccer team.

Still, pressure for city officials and the club to answer questions was mounting.

Zico, perhaps the most famous player to come through the club, was among those who demanded more transparen­cy.

“If you are fined 30 times, you can’t keep postponing and get 20 more. Something has to be done,” the former player told Globo TV news’ sports channel, SporTV.

Flamengo has been fined 31 times because of infraction­s at the training ground, which had to be temporaril­y closed in October 2017. The club has not paid 21 of those fines, Rio de Janeiro’s city hall said.

“The (club) needs planning in every sense. Because tragedies don’t warn, they are unexpected,” Zico said.

Authoritie­s are still investigat­ing the cause of the fire, though there has been speculatio­n about a possible short-circuit in the air conditioni­ng unit.

Officials said Monday that all authoritie­s involved in the investigat­ion would go to the burned dormitory Tuesday morning for an inspection.

In the meantime, family members and friends of 15-year-old victim Samuel Thomas de Souza Rosa gathered for his funeral and burial Monday. De Souza Rosa’s mother fainted several times and had to be carried out of the church into an ambulance after the ceremony.

“It hurts a lot,” the boy’s uncle, Severino Fausto Santana, told The Associated Press. “There should have been an emergency door. There wasn’t. That’s why the 10 (boys) died.”

Three players remain in the hospital. Jhonata Ventura remained in serious condition, while Cauan Emanuel and Francisco Dyogo were listed in stable condition.

 ??  ?? The mother of Samuel de Souza Rosa, one of the 10 young soccer players killed in a fire at the training ground of Brazilian soccer club Flamengo, is carried by mourners during his funeral in Sao Joao de Meriti, Brazil, Monday. The death of de Souza Rosa and his teammates has shed a tragic light on the state of shoddy infrastruc­ture and lax oversight in Latin America’s largest nation. AP PhoTo/Leo correA
The mother of Samuel de Souza Rosa, one of the 10 young soccer players killed in a fire at the training ground of Brazilian soccer club Flamengo, is carried by mourners during his funeral in Sao Joao de Meriti, Brazil, Monday. The death of de Souza Rosa and his teammates has shed a tragic light on the state of shoddy infrastruc­ture and lax oversight in Latin America’s largest nation. AP PhoTo/Leo correA
 ??  ?? In this August 2017 file photo. the car marques badge of Volkswagen, VW, is photograph­ed on a car in Berlin, Germany. Economists at the Halle Institute for Economic Research issued a report on Monday , saying a no-deal Brexit would affect more than 100,000 jobs in Germany that depend on trade with Britain, with the auto industry hardest hit. AP PhoTo/ MArkus schreIber
In this August 2017 file photo. the car marques badge of Volkswagen, VW, is photograph­ed on a car in Berlin, Germany. Economists at the Halle Institute for Economic Research issued a report on Monday , saying a no-deal Brexit would affect more than 100,000 jobs in Germany that depend on trade with Britain, with the auto industry hardest hit. AP PhoTo/ MArkus schreIber

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