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At least 24 dead in Guinea rap concert stampede

Map showing Conakry in Guinea where 24 people died in a stampede/AFP

Map showing Conakry in Guinea where 24 people died in a stampede/AFP

Conakry, July 30 – At least 24 people died and dozens more were hurt in a stampede at a rap concert on a beach in the Guinean capital Conakry, prompting a week of national mourning.

The government said the west African country suffered a “tragedy” a day after Guineans celebrated the Eid al-Fitr holiday ending the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

The authorities gave no details on how the stampede occurred on Rogbane beach in the city’s northern Ratoma suburb where popular Guinean rap group “Instinct Killers” was playing among other artists.

Medics took at least 24 bodies including 13 girls to a hospital morgue at Donka, a hospital official told AFP.

“For the time being we have 24 bodies at the Donka hospital morgue and dozens of injured were rushed to various (Conakry) health centres after this deadly stampede,” said a police officer.

The president’s office said in a statement it was “shocked by the tragedy caused by (crowd) movements at a cultural event”.

It said there were dead and injured but did not give a toll. “A week of national mourning has been decreed from this day,” it added.

An investigation has been launched to determine what caused the stampede. The official in charge of organising such events was suspended.

The tragedy, which comes as the country of 10 million struggles to cope with a deadly Ebola epidemic, is not the first of its kind to occur in Conakry.

At least two people were killed and 25 injured when fans stampeded at a concert given in Guinea by popular local musician Sekouba “Fatako” Kouyate on December 18, 2001.

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Similar tragedies have marred musical events around the world.

A stampede at a world music festival in Rabat, Morocco in May 2009 left at least 11 people dead and some 40 others injured.

Ten people, mostly teenagers, were killed and dozens injured in a stampede at a packed music concert in Indonesia’s Central Java province in December 2006.

Two year earlier, in February 2004, four people died and dozens were injured in a rock concert stampede in the country’s South Kalimantan province.

In October 2005, 11 people were crushed to death and around 60 injured in South Korea in a stampede before a pop concert in the southern city of Sangju.

And in one of the deadliest such incidents on record, in May 1999, 52 people, mostly young women, were trampled to death after a rock concert in Belarus, authorities said.

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