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- WORLD, Page 40World NotesBRITAINBedlam in the Bleachers
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- A capacity crowd had turned out for the Football Association
- Cup semifinal last week at the 54,000-seat Hillsborough stadium
- in Sheffield, South Yorkshire. As Liverpool and Nottingham
- Forest faced off on the field, throngs of fans without tickets
- poured through a gate that had been opened by police. Seven
- minutes into the game, a surge of spectators pushed into the
- packed standing room, crushing those in front against metal
- barriers. One of the barriers gave way, and at least 93 people
- were killed.
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- Dead and injured fans lay strewn across the field. After
- calm had been restored, Football Association officials promised a
- "full investigation" into the tragedy. Among the questions: Why
- did police fail to control the overflow crowd? And who
- authorized the opening of the gate? Said British Sport Minister
- Colin Moynihan: "This is a tragic day for sport, football and
- the country as a whole."
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- British soccer has been plagued by a series of fatal
- mishaps. During a 1985 soccer game in Bradford, England, fire
- engulfed the grandstand, killing 56 fans. The same year, 39
- people died at Heysel Stadium in Brussels after Liverpool
- hooligans attacked supporters of the rival Italian team,
- touching off a lethal stampede. As a result, the Union of
- European Football Associations banned English clubs
- indefinitely and barred Liverpool from playing in Europe for an
- additional three seasons.
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- For British soccer fans, last week's tragedy could not have
- come at a more inopportune time. Only four days earlier the
- U.E.F.A. had decided to re-admit English clubs in the 1990-91
- season, subject to British government approval.
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