Fans angry at being blocked from entering a Salvadoran soccer league match knocked down an entrance gate to the stadium, leading to a crush that left at least 12 people dead and dozens injured, officials and witnesses said Sunday.
The stampede took place late Saturday during a quarterfinals
match between clubs Alianza and Fas at Monumental Stadium in Cuscatlan in
southern San Salvador, the nation’s capital.
“The game was scheduled to start at 7:30 p.m. but they
closed the gate at 7 p.m. and left us outside (the stadium) with our tickets in
our hands,” said Alianza fan José Ángel Penado. “People got angry. We asked
them to let us in, but no. So they knocked the gate down.”
Civil Protection director Luis Amaya said about 500 people had
been attended to and about 100 were taken to hospitals. At least two of the
injured transported to hospitals were in critical condition.
“El Salvador is in mourning,” said a statement from the
press office of Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, which confirmed that at
least 12 people had died.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino said Sunday in a speech to a
World Health Organization meeting in Geneva that “I simply would like to
express, of course, my condolences to all the people of El Salvador for this
tragic incident.”
Play was suspended about 16 minutes into the match, when
fans in the stands waving frantically began getting the attention of those on
the field and carrying the injured out of a tunnel and down to the pitch.
Local television transmitted live images of the aftermath of
the stampede, which appeared to be by mainly Alianza fans. Dozens made it onto
the field where they received medical treatment. Fans who escaped the crush
stood on the field furiously waving shirts attempting to review people lying on
the grass barely moving.
“It was a night of terror. I never thought something like
this would happen to me,” said Alianza fan Tomas Renderos as he left a hospital
where he had received medical attention. “Fortunately I only have a few
bruises... but not everyone had my luck.”
Pedro Hernández, president of El Salvador soccer’s first
division, said the preliminary information he had was that the stampede
occurred because fans pushed through a gate into the stadium.
“It was an avalanche of fans who overran the gate. Some were
still under the metal in the tunnel. Others managed to make it to the stands
and then to the field and were smothered,” an unidentified volunteer with the
Rescue Commandos first aid group told journalists.
National Civil Police Commissioner Mauricio Arriza Chicas,
at the scene of the tragedy, said there would be a criminal investigation in
conjunction with the Attorney General’s Office.
“We are going to investigate from the ticket sales, the
entries into the stadium, but especially the southern zone,” where, he said,
the gate was pushed open.
The Salvadoran Soccer Federation said in a statement that it
regretted what had happened and voiced support for the victims’ families.
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