Concert stampede in Italy leaves 6 dead

Five teenagers and a mother have been killed and dozens of others have been injured in a stampede at an overcrowded rap concert in central Italy.

The scene outside the morgue in Corinaldo, central Italy.

Five of those killed in a stampede at a rap concert in central Italy were aged between 14 and 16. (AAP)

Teenagers panicked before a rap concert at a jammed Italian disco, setting off a stampede that killed five of them and a mother who had brought her daughter to the event, authorities and survivors said. Fifty-three people were injured, including 13 seriously.

Several survivors said panic spread through the late-night crowd after someone unleashed an irritant spray. Investigators said they were checking those reports.

Video on state TV RaiNews24 showed scores of teenagers rushing out a door and surging toward a low wall near an exit at the Blue Lantern disco in the central Italian town of Corinaldo, near Ancona on the Adriatic coast. The barrier then gives way and a cascade of teenagers tumble over it, falling on top of each other.

The bodies of the trampled victims were all found near a low wall, Ancona Firefighters Cmdr. Dino Poggiali told Sky TG24 News. State radio said most of the dead had their skulls crushed in the melee.

The victims - three girls and two boys - ranged in age from 14 to 16 and the mother who was killed was 39, said Colonel Cristian Carrozza, commander of the Ancona province Carabinieri paramilitary police.

"Close down the place, convict someone. Who's going to give me back my son?" Giuseppe Orlandi, fighting back tears, told reporters after he had identified the body of his son, Mattia, 15, in a hospital morgue.

The stampede occurred shortly after 1am, less than 30 minutes before the concert by Italian rapper Sfera Ebbasta was to begin.

Authorities said organisers had sold far too many tickets for the space. Ancona Chief Prosecutor Monica Garulli told reporters that about 1400 tickets were sold but the disco was only able to hold about 870 people.

Later, Premier Giuseppe Conte, who visited the scene, said the disco had three rooms but inexplicably only used one for the concert, and it only holds 469 people.

While prosecutors investigate "the government must ask itself what to so that such tragedies must never happen again," Conte said.

The woman who was killed, Eleanora Girolimini, had four children and had accompanied her 11-year-old daughter to the concert, her husband, Paolo, told reporters. The girl was treated for a knee injury.

Outside the hospital where the bodies were brought, he lashed out at the event's organisers, saying that many at the event were drunk.

"Four children now are without their mother, and one of them is still nursing," he said. "It was way overcrowded and alcohol abounded."

ANSA said hospital doctors treating the injured said some survivors had burns apparently caused by an irritant spray.


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Source: AAP



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