AFCON Qualifier: Madagascar stadium stampede leaves 1 dead, 40 injured
Mon Sep 10, 2018 07:56:am Sports
5.2K By Obiaks Blog
One person has died and at least 40 have been injured in a stampede outside the Mahamasina Stadium, Antananarivo ahead of Madagascar's Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against Senegal on Sunday.
According to RFI, supporters attempting to get into the stadium prompted a stampede outside the entrance, where spectators had been queuing since early morning for the 2.30pm local time kick-off.
"The supporters wanted to get in but the gate was closed because the stands were full," said police chief Herilalatiana Andrianarisaona, as per the French source.
"The people in front couldn't step back, and other people arrived behind them in some numbers," he added. "This is what provoked the stampede."
The HJRA hospital in Antananarivo confirmed that, provisionally, one person had died and a further 40 have been injured, with the Madagascan Ministry of Youth and Sport publishing a list of the injured on their Official Facebook page.
The Minister of Youth and Sports, Tsihoara Faratiana, has already visited the injured in hospital along with the Minister of Health.
A minute's silence was observed before the match, in which the Barea twice battled back to hold Senegal to a 2-2 draw.
African football is no stranger to stadium deaths, with poor crowd control, overzealous policing, inadequate facilities and fan misbehaviour all leading to a series of incidents at stadiums across the continent over the last few decades.
The worst loss of life was at the Accra Sports Stadium in Ghana when 127 fans died in 2001 after police fired teargas into the stands following a league match between Hearts of Oak and Asante Kotoko.
In 2012, 74 people were killed when fans of Egyptian side Al Masry turned violent against visiting supporters of Al Ahly at the Port Said Stadium.
Panicked Ahly fans were attacked with blunt instruments and knives, and many were killed in a crush as they tried to escape the violence, while others fell or were thrown from terraces.
Last year, eight fans died in a stampede at a game in Malawi, while the same number were killed in a cup final in Senegal.
Two fans were killed in South Africa during a crush at an entrance gate for a preseason friendly between Soweto sides Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates at Soccer City, the venue for the 2010 World Cup final, in July last year.
ESPN
According to RFI, supporters attempting to get into the stadium prompted a stampede outside the entrance, where spectators had been queuing since early morning for the 2.30pm local time kick-off.
"The supporters wanted to get in but the gate was closed because the stands were full," said police chief Herilalatiana Andrianarisaona, as per the French source.
"The people in front couldn't step back, and other people arrived behind them in some numbers," he added. "This is what provoked the stampede."
The HJRA hospital in Antananarivo confirmed that, provisionally, one person had died and a further 40 have been injured, with the Madagascan Ministry of Youth and Sport publishing a list of the injured on their Official Facebook page.
The Minister of Youth and Sports, Tsihoara Faratiana, has already visited the injured in hospital along with the Minister of Health.
A minute's silence was observed before the match, in which the Barea twice battled back to hold Senegal to a 2-2 draw.
African football is no stranger to stadium deaths, with poor crowd control, overzealous policing, inadequate facilities and fan misbehaviour all leading to a series of incidents at stadiums across the continent over the last few decades.
The worst loss of life was at the Accra Sports Stadium in Ghana when 127 fans died in 2001 after police fired teargas into the stands following a league match between Hearts of Oak and Asante Kotoko.
In 2012, 74 people were killed when fans of Egyptian side Al Masry turned violent against visiting supporters of Al Ahly at the Port Said Stadium.
Panicked Ahly fans were attacked with blunt instruments and knives, and many were killed in a crush as they tried to escape the violence, while others fell or were thrown from terraces.
Last year, eight fans died in a stampede at a game in Malawi, while the same number were killed in a cup final in Senegal.
Two fans were killed in South Africa during a crush at an entrance gate for a preseason friendly between Soweto sides Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates at Soccer City, the venue for the 2010 World Cup final, in July last year.
ESPN
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