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Ivory Coast fined for stampede

People carry an injured person after a stampede at a football stadium inin Abijdjan, Ivory Coast ( 29 March 2009)

Fifa has fined the Ivorian Football Federation $47,000 following the enquiry into the stadium tragedy where 20 fans died in Abidjan in March.

Football’s world governing body imposed a series of safety measures after concluding the long investigation.

Fifa also announced a donation $96,000 to a fund set up for the families of the victims.

The safety measures will be in place for the Elephants’ next round of the 2010 World Cup qualifiers in September.

The capacity for the match against Burkina Faso on 5 September will be set at 20,000, with a control cordon to be set up at least one kilometre from the stadium.

A separate spectator control cordon around 200 metres away to prevent non-ticket holders getting through.

"The total capacity of the stadium (34,600) will only be allowed in subsequent matches if the above-mentioned measures are applied for each match," Fifa said in a statement.

Fifa investigators spoke with Ivorian police, football and government officials but the disciplinary ruling did not blame anyone.

More than 130 people were injured as Ivory Coast beat Malawi 5-0, with a reported 36,000 trying to cram into a stadium which has a capacity of 34,600.

The crush occurred when thousands of fans massed outside the Felix Boigny stadium before the World Cup qualifier. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Madge refuses to co-operate in inquiry over death of two crewmembers

Queen of Pop Madonna has refused to co-operate in an ongoing inquiry into the death of two of her crewmembers.
Madge, 50, had been set to perform in Marseille, but had to cancel the concert after the stadium roof collapsed, killing two of her crew and injuring many others.
Leeds technician Charles Prow, 23, had been [...]

Google view of Millennium Stadium

Millennium Stadium

A 360-degree virtual tour of the Millennium Stadium is to be featured on Google Street View.

The Cardiff venue is one of six places voted to be specially filmed by the search engine’s mobile mapping service.

The images of the 74,500-seat venue, both inside and out, will be gathered by a team using a three-wheeled cycle.

Other sites to be mapped are: the Angel of the North, Loch Ness, Stonehenge, the Eden Project, Warwick Castle and Bamburgh Castle in Northumberland.

Cardiff is already one of 25 British towns and cities with street-level images available on Google Street View, launched in April this year.

The Millennium Stadium was a winner in the online campaign launched by Google and the travel and tourism body VisitBritain asking the public to name their top tourist treasures.

The venue marks its 10th anniversary this year, with managers saying it it has brought over £1bn to the Welsh economy and supported 2,400 jobs.

Google trike and rider

It attracts over 1m visitors a year, almost half of them from outside Wales, by hosting the Six Nations rugby tournament, concerts by rock and pop giants ranging from U2, Bruce Springsteen to Oasis and Madonna as well as speedway, rugby league, rallying and monster truck racing.

The stadium also held the FA Cup finals and semi-finals while Wembley was being rebuilt.

Communications officer, John Williams, said the stadium was a "jewel in the crown of a proud nation".

He said: "Whether the stadium is in use for a rock or pop concert, hosting a major sporting event or conference, being used as a film set for shows like Doctor Who and Torchwood or even as a frequent backdrop to TV news items – in any one of its many guises – the versatile, retractable roofed- venue dominates its surroundings and remains instantly recognisable.

Face-blurring

Google said it had despatched the Google Street View Trike, an 18 stone (115 kg) machine with a camera mounted on pole behind the rider.

The trike is designed to make imagery collections in places less accessible by cars, such as historic landmarks and coastal paths.

Google said it would apply its face-blurring and licence plate blurring policy to the images, which will be made available at a later date in Street View on Google Maps.

Snowdon, Ben Nevis and the Giant’s Causeway were also said to be three popular suggestions but Google took the view these would be "just too tricky" for someone to ride the trike.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Back on side

Iraqi football fans at the match in Irbil, 10 July

By Neil Arun
Irbil

Iraq thrashed Palestine 3-0 in a football match that will be remembered less for its scoreline and more for celebrations better suited to the lifting of a siege.

Forced by violence at home to play all its games abroad, the Iraqi national side ended its six-year exile on Friday in the northern city of Irbil.

Fans who had followed the fortunes of their team on TV roared deliriously as they saw the first players jog on to the pitch.

Chants of "Iraq, Iraq" rang through stands which felt, in the blazing afternoon heat, like the rim of an exploding volcano.

"Sport was under sanctions," yelled Iraq’s most famous football fan, a man from Baghdad known only by one name, Khaddouri. "Now the embargo has been lifted."

Before kick-off, scores of white doves were released. They swirled around the stadium, unwilling to leave. Heavily armed soldiers shooed them off the pitch.

Welcoming the Palestinians

Iraq’s national team is a regional superpower. Traditionally one of the strongest sides in the Middle East, in 2007 they were crowned Asian champions after defeating Saudi Arabia.

Palestine player Amar Abu Salil (L) vies for the ball against Iraqi player Hawar Mulla Muhammad in Irbil, 10 July

The victory coincided with the climax of the sectarian conflict that engulfed Iraq after the US-led invasion in 2003. Fans celebrated in the streets, briefly defying the threat of bombings that had become a daily norm.

The Palestinian team is one of the weakest in the region. It has developed fitfully, with the movements of its players constantly curtailed by the conflict with Israel.

At the game in Irbil, no Iraqi fans commented on the footballing disparity between the two teams. Instead, they focused on what they saw as a bond with the Palestinians – another Middle Eastern society brutalised by violence.

As the visiting team stepped on to the turf, the stadium loudspeakers urged the crowd to welcome them. The stands obliged, erupting in passionate cries of "Long Live Palestine!"

Parts of Iraq may now be safe enough to host a foreign team but the Palestinians’ home is not. Like the Iraqi side a few years ago, the players must ply their trade abroad.

With few away fans accompanying them, they rely on charitable cheers from the home crowd.

Adjusting the Palestinian scarf around his neck, veteran Iraq fan Khaddouri said: "The Palestinians are our brethren. If they can send their team to Iraq, so can everyone else."

Kurdish scorer

The first goal came in the 30th minute of the first half, scored off a corner kick. The stadium erupted.

The scorer was Hawar Mulla Mohammed, a Kurd. In Irbil, capital of the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region, Hawar is a local hero.

He gives the Kurds a strong reason to support the largely Arab Iraqi team at a time of rising tensions between Baghdad and Irbil, most notably over Kirkuk, a violent, oil-rich city claimed by both Kurds and Arabs.

Another two goals followed in the second half. The Palestinians defended gamely, stifling the Iraqi strikers’ more flamboyant efforts.

Khaddouri stalked the sidelines as if squaring up for a fight. He exhorted the crowd with his arms.

The chant came back from the stands for a man as famous as the players themselves: "Khaddouri! Khaddouri!"

Outside the stadium, traffic came to halt. Horns blared and young men leaned out of cars and pick-up trucks, draped in Iraqi flags or the Kurdish region’s distinctive tricolour.

They lingered in the streets long after the game ended – like the doves, unwilling to leave. A few soldiers tried half-heartedly to usher them away.

Neil Arun is based in Iraq as an editor for The Institute for War and Peace Reporting.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.