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On Tuesday, elite Indonesian police officers were under investigation over a stadium stampede that killed 131 people (as of Tuesday, according to local health officials), including dozens of children, in one of the deadliest disasters in football history.
The six additional victims who succumbed to their injuries "have been sent home to their families", said Wiyanto Wijoyo, head of the health agency in Malang Regency, where the tragedy took place.
As public anger grew over the tragedy, police moved to punish those responsible for the tragedy in the city of Malang that witnesses say started when officers fired tear gas into packed stands to quell a pitch invasion.
Arema FC fans set up a makeshift centre in Malang on Monday to receive legal complaints, saying they would file a lawsuit against officers for causing what they said were scores of deaths by indiscriminately targeting spectators in confined terraces.
Police described the incident as a riot and said two officers were killed, but survivors accused them of overreacting.
"If there was a riot, it [the tear gas] should be fired to the pitch, not in the stand," Danny Agung Prasetyo, supporter group Arema DC's coordinator told AFP.
"Many of the victims were those who were in the stand. They were panicking because of the tear gas."
On Monday, the local police chief was replaced, nine officers were suspended, and 19 others were put under investigation over the disaster that struck the stadium filled with only hometown Arema FC fans, national police spokesman Dedi Prasetyo said.
The Indonesian government suspended the country's national league and announced a task force to investigate the tragedy. It said the probe would take two to three weeks to complete.
The terraces of the Kanjuruhan stadium were packed with thousands of young "Aremania" — as the Arema FC fans are called — to watch their team face fierce rivals Persebaya Surabaya.
But after a 3-2 defeat, the first at home for more than two decades to their adversaries from East Java's biggest city, fans streamed down to the pitch to speak to players and management.
Police responded to the pitch invasion with force by kicking and hitting fans with batons, according to witnesses and video footage, prompting more fans to join the crowd on the pitch.
Calls for an independent investigation have grown since details of the stampede started to emerge over the weekend.
"We will find out what really happened, about the violence and the excessive use of force," Choirul Anam, a commissioner of the National Commission of Human Rights (Komnas HAM), told a press briefing on Monday.
"Why would you kick someone who was just walking on the side of the field?"
Fan anger was displayed at the stadium where a police truck was torched and the walls were daubed with graffiti that read "Tear gas vs mother's tears" and "Our friends died here".
More vigils were planned in Malang on Tuesday after fans and Arema FC players gathered outside the stadium a day before to lay flowers at the scene, and pray for the victims.
Among the dead were 32 children, an official at the women's empowerment and child protection ministry told AFP, adding that the youngest was a toddler aged just three or four.
Indonesia's health ministry said all the victims of the stampede have now been identified.
Of the hundreds injured, 68 were severely wounded and 219 suffered moderate injuries.
Twenty-six are still being treated for their wounds, health ministry official Siti Nadia Tarmizi told state news agency Antara.
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Football fan violence is an enduring problem in Indonesia, and Persebaya Surabaya fans had been barred from the game because of it.
However, fans said they were not to blame.
Indonesian officials said more tickets had been allocated than should have been, while some of the stadium's doors appeared to have been shut, according to witnesses.
That left physically stronger supporters to scale large fences in order to escape the mayhem while the most vulnerable were at the mercy of the crush, as tear gas rained down.
"The doors were closed, that's why people were pushing. Some lay down in the corner" by a closed gate to try to escape the crush, a 16-year-old survivor of the chaos told AFP.
"In the stand, there were some people who got hit directly. I saw it myself," he said.
Everything that could go wrong at a football match, appeared to do so on Saturday night, culminating in a disaster never seen before in an Indonesian stadium.
"You could see and sense that something bad could potentially happen. That's the kind of fear you usually get when you travel to a game here," Indonesian football pundit Pangeran Siahaan told AFP.
"There's a lot of dangers every time you go into a football stadium in Indonesia."
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