MADRID Dec. 2 (EUROPA PRESS) –
Clashes between fans of two soccer clubs that were playing this Sunday in the final of a tournament in the city of N’zérékoré, located in the southeast of Guinea, have left at least dozens of dead and injured.
This has been reported by the Media Guinée portal, without the local authorities having provided a balance so far.
The incidents occurred as a result of referee decisions during a match between the Labé and N’Zérékoré clubs, which were competing for first place in a tournament dedicated to the leader of the Guinean military junta after the coup d’état in 2021, General Mamadi Dombouya.
Supporters of the two teams have been involved in a pitched battle, causing a stampede and riots in which Guinean Police have had to intervene using tear gas, the aforementioned information portal and other local media point out. In addition, they have looted and set fire to a police station in the area and have set up barricades around the stadium.
The Guinean Prime Minister, Amadou Oury Bah, has regretted the episodes and has called for calm so that “hospital services are not hindered when providing first aid to the injured.”
“The regional authorities are striving to restore calm and serenity to the population (…) The moral authorities of the city are also asked to help restore social calm,” he declared on his Facebook social network account.
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