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Thursday, December 1, 2016

Survivors found but 76 feared dead after Brazilian club's plane crashes in Colombia

    

Associação Chapecoense de Futebol ahead of a recent Copa Sudamericana match (Photo: Getty Images)
by Keir Radnedge, AIPS Football Commission Chairman



LAUSANNE, November 29, 2016 - Brazilian football players, officials and journalists are believed dead after an aircraft carrying 81 people, including the Brazilian club Chapecoense, crashed overnight on the outskirts of Medellin.
Military sources in Colombia have suggested that only five people had survived the accident including three players - goalkeeper Danilo, Jackson Follmann and Alan Ruschel - one crew member and a journalist, Rafael Henzel.

ACF Chapecoense from the southern Brazilian state of Santa Catarina had been due to play the first leg of the Copa Sudamericana final against Atletico Nacional tomorrow evening. The competition is a South American equivalent of the Europa League ie, the continent's No2 international club event.

First reports said that the captain had reported an electrical problem before the plane, a British Aerospace 146, undertook two loops on its approach to Medellin before crashing in mountainous terrain which created immediate problems for rescue teams.

Officials from the Jose Maria Cordova airport in Rionegro, to which the plane had been headed, said it had been chartered from the Bolivian company LaMia.

The aircraft manifest for flight 2933 suggested that the 17-year-old plane's passengers included 40 players and officials and 21 journalists in addition to the nine-person flight crew. It was on the last of three legs of the flight from Sao Paulo to Santa Cruz de la Sierra (Bolivia) and on towards Medellin.

The mayor from the city of La Ceja, close to the crash site, said the plane had not exploded or caught fire, increasing hopes for finding more survivors.

CONMEBOL, the South American football confederation, responded by suspending all international club competition. Atletico Nacional issued a first statement expressing condolence and "solidarity" with the Brazilian club.

ACF Chapecoense have provided an uplifting ‘Cinderella’ story in a difficult decade for Brazilian football with multiple scandal and corruption allegations and the historic World Cup semi-final failure in 2014.

The club come from the city of Chapecó in the southern state of Santa Catarina which had never previously figured seriously among the rich and powerful of the Brazilian game. Now they rank among the five main clubs from Santa Catarina along with Avai, Criciuma, Figueirense and Joinville.

ACF were founded in 1973, from a merger of local rivals Atlético Chapecoense and Independente, and won the first of their four state titles in 1977. They were promoted into the top division of the national championship in 2014 and are currently ninth.

This was their second foray into international competition. Last year they lost in the Copa Sudamericana quarter-finals to River Plate of Argentina. This year, however, they progressed to the final by defeating Argentina’s San Lorenzo de Almagro on the away goals rule in the semis.


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