Johannesburg football stadium crush kills two
At least two people have been killed and 17 injured in a crush at South Africa's biggest stadium, football officials say.
It took place during the Soweto derby between football clubs Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates in Johannesburg.
Orlando
Pirates said the crush happened when people attempted to push their way
through the gates into the 87,000-capacity FNB stadium.
Authorities allowed the pre-season cup game to continue.
Public
safety official Michael Sun said on Twitter that all gates at the
stadium had been opened to ensure crowd control and that the situation
was later brought under control.
Of the 17 injured, one is in a critical condition, the stadium managers said.
@blacklabelsa CUP STATEMENT: We are saddened by the fatalities this afternoon due to a number of people attempting to push through the gates— Orlando Pirates FC (@Orlando_Pirates) July 29, 2017
Reuters said live television coverage of the match, which Kaizer Chiefs won 1-0, showed no obvious disturbance.
The
stadium served as the venue for Nelson Mandela's first speech after his
release from prison in 1990, and is where the memorial for Mr Mandela
was held in 2013.
It was rebuilt for the 2010 football World Cup,
where it was known as Soccer City and hosted the final between Spain and
the Netherlands.
In April 2001, 43 supporters died in a crush
during another match between Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates at the
Ellis Park stadium in Johannesburg.
And 10 years before that, 42 people died in a crush between the same two teams at the Oppenheimer Stadium in the city of Orkney.
BBC
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