Tuesday 6 May 2014

RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazilian police said Monday they had arrested a man suspected of killing a man after a football match by hurling a toilet bowl at him.

RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazilian police said Monday they had arrested a man suspected of killing a man after a football match by hurling a toilet bowl at him.

Everton Felipe Santana, 23 was arrested on suspicion he threw the bowl  which killed Paulo Ricardo Gomes da Silva, 26, outside the Arruda stadium  Friday in the World Cup host city of Recife.
 
Da Silva died after fans clashed outside the stadium on the other side of  town from the brand new Pernambuco Arena which will be used for World Cup  action in Recife.
 
Da Silva was buried on Sunday after an incident of hooliganism that shocked  Brazil, who will host the World Cup next month after a series of recent  outbreaks of football-related violence.
 
Globo’s G1 web news portal quoted Santana’s lawyer as saying he “knew what  he was doing” even if he had not planned on causing disorder when he went to  see the game between local side Santa Cruz and Parana.
 
“He confessed to participating, but could not explain his motive,” Globo  quoted the lawyer as saying, adding Santana had told him he was ashamed of what  he had done, and had given police details of other fans involved.
 
Earlier, Brazilian Minister of Sport Aldo Rebelo condemned the incident.
 
“Imagine. Someone goes to a football stadium, proceeds to dismantle a  toilet and throws it at another fan. What is that?” asked Rebelo incredulously.
 
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff tweeted her sorrow and outrage at the  killing Sunday, saying that “a country that loves football cannot tolerate  violence in its stadiums.”     Brazil’s Tribunal for Sporting Justice on Sunday imposed a two-match  supporter ban for upcoming matches at Arruda stadium and said the venue would  remain closed pending the outcome of an ongoing investigation.
 
Relatives of Da Silva say they are considering legal action against Santa  Cruz.
 
But chairman Antonio Luiz Neto insists the club did what it could to keep  fans apart, allowing a 15-minute interval for rival supporters to leave the  venue.
 
On Sunday, Globo quoted Beraldo Neto, a professor of physics, as indicating  Da Silva was hit by a force equivalent to an object weighing 350 kilograms (770  pounds). 
 
He estimated its weight at 15 kilograms and the speed it was thrown at some  80 kilometres (50 miles) per hour.
 
Other recent soccer violence in Brazil saw fans of Atletico Paranaense  engage in bloody clashes in December with visitors Vasco da Gama and fans of  Sao Paulo-based Corinthians attack players in the club’s training complex. -- AFP


Read more: Football: Suspect detained after Brazil soccer death - Latest - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/latest/football-suspect-detained-after-brazil-soccer-death-1.588693#ixzz30vdHdzWP

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