Approximately 50 football fans, including children, were killed in a stampede during a match at a crowded stadium in southern Guinea’s largest city of Nzerekore on Sunday, as security forces tried to quell clashes, according to local media and a coalition of political parties.The stampede broke out on Sunday afternoon during the final of a local tournament between the Labe and Nzerekore teams, being played in honour of Guinea’s military leader, Mamadi Doumbouya.Guinea’s Prime Minister Amadou Oury Bah said on X, without being specific about the number of those killed: “The government deplores the incidents that marred the football match between the Labe and Nzerekore teams this afternoon in Nzerekore. During the stampede, victims were recorded.”The regional authorities are working to restore calm in the area, he added.A coalition of political parties known as the National Alliance for Alternation and Democracy said in a statement that the stampede resulted in dozens of deaths and injuries.Local media reported that security forces tried to use teargas to restore calm after the chaos that followed a disputed penalty.”This (the disputed penalty) angered supporters who threw stones. This is how the security services used tear gas,” the local Media Guinea reported.It said several of those killed were children while some of the injured being treated at a regional hospital are in critical condition.Videos that appeared to be from the scene showed a section of the stadium shouting and protesting the refereeing before the clashes broke out as fans poured onto the field. People were running as they tried to escape from the stadium, many of them jumping the high fence.Videos also showed many people lying on the floor in what looked like a hospital as a crowd gathered nearby, some assisting the wounded.The National Alliance for Alternation and Democracy coalition called for an investigation. It said the tournament was organized to drum support for the “illegal and inappropriate” political ambition of the military leader.Guinea has been led by the military since soldiers ousted President Alpha Conde in 2021. It is one of a growing number of West African countries, including Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso, where the military has taken power and delayed a return to civilian rule.Doumbouya overran the president three years ago, saying he was preventing the country from slipping into chaos and chastised the previous government for broken promises. He has, however, been criticized for not meeting the expectations that he raised.
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