Springfield News-Sun

Leader says locked gates contribute­d to deaths at stadium

- By Agoes Basoeki

MALANG, INDONESIA — Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo said on Wednesday that locked gates had contribute­d to the crush at the soccer stadium that left 131 dead and over 400 injured when police fired tear gas and set off a panicked run for the exits.

Widodo made the statement after touring the Kanjuruhan soccer stadium in East Java’s Malang city for a first-hand look at the scene of one of the world’s deadliest disasters at a sporting event. He also visited the victims recovering at Saiful Anwar General Hospital and pledged a thorough investigat­ion into what had transpired on Saturday night.

Police continued to insist that the gates were open but were too narrow and could only accommodat­e two people at a time when hundreds were trying to escape.

Indonesia’s national soccer associatio­n said that because of a lack of workers, only a few people were ordered to open the gates, and they had not yet reached some doors when spectators began rushing to escape tear gas fired by police in an attempt to control fans who had entered the pitch.

Police acted after some of the 42,000 Arema FC fans ran onto the field in anger after their team was defeated 3-2, its first loss at home against visiting Persebaya Surabaya in 23 years.

“As an illustrati­on, I saw the problem was there are locked doors, steep stairs and panic,” Widodo said in a news conference. “But all of this will be concluded later by an inquiry team.”

Widodo said that he spoke by phone with FIFA President Gianni Infantino on Monday to brief him on the investigat­ion. They also discussed Indonesia’s preparatio­ns in hosting the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup.

Widodo said that Infantino ensured him that “FIFA is ready to help us to improve our football management.”

“I think we really need a total evaluation of our entire football management of the matches, stadiums, spectators, time and security,” he said. “So that this stadium disaster will never occur again.”

According to recommenda­tions by FIFA and the Asian Football Confederat­ion, exits at stadiums must be unlocked at all times during a game for safety purposes. Those rules don’t necessaril­y apply to domestic or national leagues but neverthele­ss are a safety standard, as is the recommenda­tion against the use of tear gas as a crowd-control measure.

 ?? DICKY BISINGLASI/AP ?? Men weep as they offer prayer outside Kanjuruhan Stadium where a soccer stampede killed 131 people on Saturday, in Malang, East Java, Indonesia. Police-fired tear gas to stop violence after the match triggered a deadly crush of fans trying to exit,
DICKY BISINGLASI/AP Men weep as they offer prayer outside Kanjuruhan Stadium where a soccer stampede killed 131 people on Saturday, in Malang, East Java, Indonesia. Police-fired tear gas to stop violence after the match triggered a deadly crush of fans trying to exit,

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