Indonesia To Demolish Football Stadium Where Stampede Killed 133

More than 130 people had died at an Indonesian football stadium when thousands of angry home fans invaded the pitch and police responded with tear gas that triggered a stampede.

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Angry home fans had invaded the pitch and police responded with tear gas that triggered a stampede.
Jakarta:

The Indonesian football stadium where a stampede killed 133 people will be torn down and rebuilt, President Joko Widodo said Tuesday, as the head of FIFA pledged to help "reform and transform" the sport in the country.

Gianni Infantino met Mr Widodo in the capital Jakarta, just over two weeks after the tragedy, and a year before the Under-20 World Cup is due to be held in the Southeast Asian nation.

More than 40 children were among those killed in the city of Malang, East Java on October 1, in what Mr Infantino described as "one of the darkest days for football".

After supporters invaded the pitch at the end of a league match between Arema FC and rivals Persebaya Surabaya, police fired tear gas into packed stands, sparking a stampede.

"For Kanjuruhan stadium in Malang, we will demolish and rebuild it according to FIFA standards," Mr Widodo told reporters.

He said the replacement stadium will have "proper facilities that can ensure the safety of both players and supporters".

"We will reform and transform football in this country," Mr Infantino added, flanking Mr Widodo.

His assurances came as hospital officials said a 33-year-old man had died from injuries sustained in the crush, bringing the confirmed death toll to 133.

"What I can guarantee to all the people of Indonesia: FIFA is here with you, FIFA is here to stay, FIFA is here to work in a very close partnership with the government, with the Asian Football Confederation and with the federation of Indonesia," Mr Infantino said.

The main focus would be improving stadium operations and fan behaviour, he added, as well as creating programmes for football in schools.

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"We will bring our experts, we will help and invest and we will make sure that Indonesia shines on the global football stage."

Mr Widodo said he agreed with FIFA "on a thorough transformation of Indonesian football to ensure all aspects of the matches follow the international safety standards".

Safety review

The gates at the 42,000-capacity Kanjuruhan stadium, which was opened in 2004, were big enough to fit only two people at a time and some were not open when the disaster struck, officials have said.

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Mr Infantino said FIFA would work with the Indonesian government to ensure the Under-20 World Cup can go ahead safely.

The youth tournament is scheduled to take place in May-June 2023, in multiple cities across the archipelago nation.

Three police officers are among six people who have been charged over the tragedy.

An investigating task force has called on the country's football association chief and all of its executive committee members to resign.

It also found that more than three hours of footage from CCTV in the main lobby and parking area of the stadium had gone missing.

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Representatives from FIFA and the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) have been in Jakarta since last week to investigate what happened, along with the national FA and the government.

Mr Widodo has suspended all football matches until the probe is complete and ordered a safety review of all stadiums

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)