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As more than 100 spectators died at a soccer field in Indonesia, a wave of condolences continues in the local area.

In particular, more than 30 children and youth victims were counted, and voices are growing that the police fired tear gas and over-repressed it, which increased the damage.



Reporter Koh Jung-hyun will tell you.



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The body, wrapped in white cloth, is buried in the ground.



Local time On the 1st, a funeral was held for two teenage boys who were crushed to death right after a professional soccer game in Malangsi, Indonesia.



[Enda/Family of the victims of the soccer field disaster: The children loved soccer, but I have never seen an Arema FC match at Kanjuruhan Stadium.

This is the first time I have watched a field game.]



The Indonesian government corrected the death toll in the soccer field disaster to 125, not 174.



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Victims were crushed to death as spectators rushed to the exit to avoid police crackdowns, but only 32 children and adolescents were counted.



At the Kanjuruhan soccer field where the disaster occurred, mourners continued to visit, and commemorative rallies were held in various places in Indonesia, including the capital Jakarta.



Citizens lit candles and mourned the victims.



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Some protesters pointed to the police's excessive suppression as the cause of the disaster and set fire to the police car.



FIFA banned the use of tear gas in stadiums, but the police did not comply, and spectators rushed to the exit in no time, resulting in increased casualties.



Posts accusing the police are spreading online, along with videos of tear gas smoke in the stadium.



The Indonesian government has formed a fact-finding team and promised to thoroughly investigate the cause of the accident.



(Screen provided by Compass TV)