July 28, 2010 2:54 PM
- Text
Germany Blames 'Love Parade' Planners For Deaths
(AP)
German state authorities on Wednesday accused the organizer of last weekend's Love Parade techno festival of major security breaches which may have led to the crush that killed 21 people and injured more than 500.
The organizer's security officials failed to properly control the entrance area where the victims were crushed, according to North Rhine-Westphalia's Interior Minister Ralf Jaeger and the state's chief police controller Dieter Wehe.
"Security did not fulfill its duty," Wehe said while presenting the key findings of a preliminary police investigation at a news conference.
It was unclear if 150 staffers who were supposed to be posted at the entrance area were really present, Wehe said, adding: "But it is a fact that the existing security detail was insufficient."
When the organizers couldn't manage to control the flow of tens of thousands pouring into the event area in Duisburg, they eventually turned to the police for help, he said.
Interior Minister Jaeger said the organizer, Rainer Schaller, failed to stop the flow of people into the tunnel when the situation was already tense at the entrance to the festival grounds.
"The organizer did not fulfill the requirements of his security concept," Jaeger told journalists.
Schaller, for his part, has fought back against the accusations of wrongdoing, noting that his security concept received official city approval. "Without the official stamp of approval we never would have let the Love Parade take place," he was quoted as saying in the Bild daily on Wednesday.
The preliminary report also left many unanswered questions regarding the responsibility of the Duisburg municipality, who was responsible for overseeing the event.
Wehe said the final authorization providing all organizational details was only passed on to police on Saturday after it repeatedly requested it. The authorization allowed a maximum of 250,000 people in the area, even though organizers expected many more.
German media estimated that as many as 1.4 million people attended the event.
The authorization also entitled organizers to have shorter and less wide emergency exits and escape routes than required by German law, Wehe said. He added that police had alerted the city before the event about possible problems with the entrance area.
Duisburg Mayor Adolf Sauerland has been widely blamed for failing to adequately oversee the event in the past days, but he rejected all accusations and has refused to resign.
Prosecutors have opened an investigation into negligent manslaughter, but have not yet identified suspects.
The death toll, meanwhile, rose to 21 on Wednesday after a 25-year-old German woman died overnight from her injuries, Duisburg prosecutors' spokesman Rolf Haferkamp said.
More than 500 people also were injured in the crush at a jammed tunnel that was the lone entrance to the festival grounds.
A memorial service for the victims will be held on Saturday with Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Christian Wulff attending.
The Love Parade was once a Berlin institution, but was held for the last time in the capital in 2006 after suffering from financial problems and tensions with city officials over cleanup costs.
It started rotating around the cities of the Ruhr industrial region in 2007, though last year's designated host, Bochum - a smaller place than Duisburg - canceled it over concerns that the city lacked the infrastructure to cope.
Organizers said Sunday that the Love Parade will never be held again.
The organizer's security officials failed to properly control the entrance area where the victims were crushed, according to North Rhine-Westphalia's Interior Minister Ralf Jaeger and the state's chief police controller Dieter Wehe.
"Security did not fulfill its duty," Wehe said while presenting the key findings of a preliminary police investigation at a news conference.
It was unclear if 150 staffers who were supposed to be posted at the entrance area were really present, Wehe said, adding: "But it is a fact that the existing security detail was insufficient."
When the organizers couldn't manage to control the flow of tens of thousands pouring into the event area in Duisburg, they eventually turned to the police for help, he said.
Interior Minister Jaeger said the organizer, Rainer Schaller, failed to stop the flow of people into the tunnel when the situation was already tense at the entrance to the festival grounds.
"The organizer did not fulfill the requirements of his security concept," Jaeger told journalists.
Schaller, for his part, has fought back against the accusations of wrongdoing, noting that his security concept received official city approval. "Without the official stamp of approval we never would have let the Love Parade take place," he was quoted as saying in the Bild daily on Wednesday.
The preliminary report also left many unanswered questions regarding the responsibility of the Duisburg municipality, who was responsible for overseeing the event.
Wehe said the final authorization providing all organizational details was only passed on to police on Saturday after it repeatedly requested it. The authorization allowed a maximum of 250,000 people in the area, even though organizers expected many more.
German media estimated that as many as 1.4 million people attended the event.
The authorization also entitled organizers to have shorter and less wide emergency exits and escape routes than required by German law, Wehe said. He added that police had alerted the city before the event about possible problems with the entrance area.
Duisburg Mayor Adolf Sauerland has been widely blamed for failing to adequately oversee the event in the past days, but he rejected all accusations and has refused to resign.
Prosecutors have opened an investigation into negligent manslaughter, but have not yet identified suspects.
The death toll, meanwhile, rose to 21 on Wednesday after a 25-year-old German woman died overnight from her injuries, Duisburg prosecutors' spokesman Rolf Haferkamp said.
More than 500 people also were injured in the crush at a jammed tunnel that was the lone entrance to the festival grounds.
A memorial service for the victims will be held on Saturday with Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Christian Wulff attending.
The Love Parade was once a Berlin institution, but was held for the last time in the capital in 2006 after suffering from financial problems and tensions with city officials over cleanup costs.
It started rotating around the cities of the Ruhr industrial region in 2007, though last year's designated host, Bochum - a smaller place than Duisburg - canceled it over concerns that the city lacked the infrastructure to cope.
Organizers said Sunday that the Love Parade will never be held again.
Popular Now in World
- A U.S. double-standard for Bahrain?
- "Voluptuous" Ukrainian nurse abandons Qaddafi
- Cockpit error sent 737 into Pacific nose dive
- Booze and bikinis in a new Egypt
- Israel To U.S.: Don't Delay Iraq Attack
- Stephen Hawking: Heaven is "a fairy story"
- Girl with Two Heads Born in Philippines
- 23 women convicted of child pornography in Sweden
- 130 Doctors Without Borders staff go missing
- GlobalPost: Qaddafi apparently sodomized
- Inside the plans of Capitol bomb suspect
- Iran: We can attack U.S. interests "anywhere"
- Iran offers to fund pipeline through Pakistan
- Pakistani fishermen reel in 40-foot whale shark
- Dramatic rescue of passengers on sinking yacht
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News
- Mardi Gras revelry takes over New Orleans
- Munch's 'The Scream' to sell in NY; may fetch $80M
- Hepatitis C deaths up, baby boomers most at risk
- Summary Box: Medco Health 4Q profit climbs 12 pct
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News






