Estádio 4 de Janeiro

Estádio 4 de Janeiro is a football stadium in Uíge, Angola.

Estádio 4 de Janeiro
Former namesEstádio José Ferreira de Lima
LocationUíge, Angola
Capacity12,000
Opened17 March 1968 (1968-03-17)
Tenants
ASK Dragão
Santa Rita de Cássia

History

Inaugurated on March 17, 1968, as Estádio José Ferreira de Lima, the stadium was then owned by Clube Recreativo do Uíge. Shortly after the independence, it was nationalized.

The state-owned 12,000-seat stadium is the only one in Angola's northern province of Uíge that meets the international standards to host Girabola matches. The stadium has been used by all clubs in the province participating at the provincial championship as well as the 2nd and 1st division championships.[1]

2017 disaster

On February 10, 2017, during the inaugural match of the 2017 Girabola between home team Santa Rita de Cássia and Recreativo do Libolo, one of the stadium's access gates collapsed as supporters tried to force their way into the stadium. As a result, 17 people were trampled to death and 76 injured, 5 of whom with life-threatening injuries. The most outrageous, odd fact about this incident is that it began just about 6 minutes from the beginning of the match with the match pursuing its normal course until the end and no one inside the stadium realizing what was going on. The Police has reportedly used tear gas to disperse angry supporters.[2]

gollark: Yes. The thing is clearly wrong.
gollark: Anyway, I'm not saying the preprocessor should somehow be bodged into doing whatever I want, just that the lack of a good mechanism - which the preprocessor *isn't* - for this sort of thing makes me like C less.
gollark: Oh, not on time.
gollark: Perl is slightly lower, technically.
gollark: I'm not. I simply choose to not use C, so I do not have to deal with this.

References

  1. "Football: 4 de Janeiro stadium allowed to host games of GirabolaZAP". ANGOP.com. 6 Feb 2017. Retrieved 14 Feb 2017.
  2. "Uíge: Dezassete mortos na partida de futebol entre Santa Rita e Recreativo do Libolo" (in Portuguese). ANGOP.com. 10 Feb 2017. Retrieved 10 Feb 2017.


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