The times. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1972-current, December 09, 2018, Image 17
WORLD The Times, Gainesville, Georgia | gainesvilletimes.com Sunday, December 9, 2018 5C BRAZIL Death toll rises to 14 after bank robbery attempts Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO — Authorities said Saturday two more people have died after bank robbers attempted to carry out heists in northeastern Brazil, bringing the death toll to 14. Brazil’s military police said that the heav ily armed group of assailants took hostages who were traveling on federal highway BR-116 around 2 a.m. on Friday. The high way leads to Milagres, a city of 30,000 inhab itants in the state of Ceara. Military police said the criminals were planning to take the hostages to two banks when they came under police fire and a shootout ensued. They said eight suspected robbers and six hostages between the ages of 13 and 60 were killed. Lielson Macedo Landim, the mayor of Milagres, told the G1 news portal Friday that the hostages were executed by the criminal group and not killed by police fire. He said that two children were among the dead. His account could not be verified. Military police said Saturday that five of the criminals died during the shootout. Two others died a few hours later in a hospital and an eighth suspect was killed in a separate clash with police on the outskirts of Milagres. Police said three others were arrested and explosives, firearms, and three vehicles were seized. Public Security Minister Raul Jungmann called the episode a “tragedy.” “Ceara is reducing the rates of violence, but unfortunately there are tragedies like this,” the minister said Friday. In a press release, military police said that security forces managed to thwart the assaults due to the “exchange of intelligence information.” Ceara is one of the most violent states in Brazil, with 59 deaths per 100,000 inhabitants. ANTONIO RODRIGUES I Associated Press Forensic officers load the body of a victim killed in an attempted bank robbery, at an entrance of a municipal hospital in Milagres, Friday, Dec. 7. ITALY Concert stampede at disco leaves 6 dead, 50 injured BY DIANA MALTAGLIATI AND FRANCES D’EMILIO Associated Press CORINALDO, Italy - Teenagers panicked before a rap concert at a jammed Italian disco, setting off a stampede that killed five of them and a mother who had brought her daughter to the event, authorities and survivors said. Fifty- three people were reported injured, including 13 in very serious condition. Several survivors said panic spread through the late-night crowd after someone unleashed an irri tant spray. Investigators said they were checking those reports. Video on state TV RaiNews24 showed scores of teenagers rushing out a door and surging toward a low wall near an exit at the Blue Lantern disco in the central Italian town of Corinaldo, near Ancona on the Adriatic coast. The bar rier then gives way and a cascade of teenagers tum ble over it, falling on top of each other. The bodies of the tram pled victims were all found near a low wall, Ancona Firefighters Cmdr. Dino Poggiali told Sky TG24 News. State radio said most of the dead had their skulls crushed in the melee. The victims — three girls and two boys — ranged in age from 14 to 16 and the mother who was killed was 39, said Col. Cristian Car- rozza, commander of the Ancona province Carabin ieri paramilitary police. “Close down the place, convict someone. Who’s going to give me back my son?” Giuseppe Orlandi, fighting back tears, told reporters after he had identified the body of his son, Mattia, 15, in a hospi tal morgue. The stampede occurred shortly after 1 a.m., less than 30 minutes before the concert by Italian rapper Sfera Ebbasta was to begin. Authorities said orga nizers had sold far too many tickets for the space. Ancona Chief Prosecutor Monica Garulli told report ers that about 1,400 tickets were sold but the disco was only able to hold about 870 people. Later, Premier Giuseppe Conte, who visited the scene, said the disco had three rooms but inexplica bly only used one for the concert, and it only holds 469 people. While prosecutors inves tigate “the government must ask itself what to so that such tragedies must never happen again,” Conte said. The woman who was killed, Eleanora Giroli- mini, had four children and had accompanied her 11-year-old daughter to the concert, her husband, Paolo, told reporters. The girl was treated for a knee injury. Outside the hospital where the bodies were brought, he lashed out at the event’s organizers, say ing that many at the event were drunk. “Four children now are without their mother, and one of them is still nurs ing,” he said. “It was way overcrowded and alcohol abounded.” ANSA said hospital doc tors treating the injured said some survivors had burns apparently caused by an irritant spray. ANDREW MEDICHINII Associated Press Carabinieri officers stand in front of the disco ‘Lanterna Azzurra’ in Corinaldo, central Italy, Saturday, Dec. 8. ‘Citizens have the right to safety wherever they are, in workplaces as well as places of entertainment.’ Sergio Mattarella Italian president An 18-year-old survi vor, who left the hospital in a wheelchair due to a leg injury, was asked by RAINew24 about the spray. She replied that whatever it was, it left her and oth ers unable to breathe, and people started to panic and flee. Doctors at Ancona’s main hospital said the most critically injured from the concert, all between 14 and 20 years old, suffered cranial and chest traumas, while others had arm or leg injuries. Sfera Ebbasta wrote on Twitter that he was “deeply pained” by the tragedy, thanked rescuers and offered his “affection and support” to the families of the dead and the injured. Out of respect to them, he cancelled some promo tional appearances. The rapper added he wanted everyone to “to stop and think how dan gerous and stupid it is to use pepper spray in a discotheque.” Italian high schools, which are usually open on Saturdays, were closed this weekend for the Dec. 8 national holiday, which made it more likely for teenagers to attend such a late concert. Fire commander Pog giali said it was too early in the investigation to know if any safety violations at the site might have played a role in the tragedy. He said when rescue workers arrived, all the doors to the disco were open. Interior Minister Mat- teo Salvini vowed that responsibility would be determined for “six broken lives — whoever out of nas tiness, stupidity or greed transformed an evening of partying into tragedy.” Italian President Sergio Mattarella demanded a full investigation. “Citizens have the right to safety wherever they are, in workplaces as well as places of entertain ment,” Mattarella said. At the Vatican, Pope Francis bowed his head in silent prayer after he told 30,000 pilgrims and tourists in St. Peter’s Square that he was praying “for the young people and the mamma” as well as for the many injured at the concert. STEFANO PAGLIARINII Associated Press Rescuers assist injured people outside a nightclub in Corinaldo, central Italy, early Saturday, Dec. 8. Qfixiatruces GaCming Gantedt! Look for this weeks Christmas Coloring Contest page in Thursday's Paper. You could win $100! * ¥ *&lssues Greater Hall Chamber's Annual Legislative Forum Thursday, December 13 7:30 am - 9:30 am neW Lanier Technical College Ramsey Conference Center 2535 Lanier Tech Drive in Gainesville Governor Nathan Deal Special Guest Governor Nathan Deal and the Hall County Legislative Delegation Butch Miller 49th State Senate John Wilkinson 50th State Senate Lee Hawkins 27th House District Matt Dubnik 29th House District Emory Dunahoo 30th House District Timothy Barr / 03rd House District $25 Chamber Members | $35 Non-Members | $350 Reserved Table Reservations Required | Non-Refundable | Includes Full Buffet Breakfast Gerri Collins: 770-532-6206 x 106 • gcollins@ghcc.com Online: GreaterHallChamber.com/events Open to the Public Greater Hall JACKSON