Mourners hold service for Love Parade crush victims

A memorial service was held today for 21 people who were crushed to death at the Love Parade techno music festival in Germany.

Mourners hold service for Love Parade crush victims

A memorial service was held today for 21 people who were crushed to death at the Love Parade techno music festival in Germany.

The service at Salvator Church, which opened with sombre organ music, was shown on screens in a football stadium and a dozen other churches in the western city of Duisburg.

Several TV stations carried the service live, and flags across the country flew at half-mast.

Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Christian Wulff were at the event, as were family members of the victims.

The 21 people who died were aged 18 to 38 and included people from Spain, Australia, Italy, Bosnia, China and Holland.

The ceremony was led by Roman Catholic and Lutheran Protestant clerics - representing Germany’s two main denominations.

“The Love Parade was danced to death,” Nikolaus Schneider, the head of the Rhineland Lutheran church assembly, said in his sermon. “In the middle of a celebration of lust for life, death showed its ugly face to all of us.”

Franz-Josef Overbeck, the Catholic bishop of the neighbouring city of Essen, said: “Life can be so oppositional: one moment there is a party, the next moment we are lying helplessly on the ground.”

“We want to stir our life in secure ways, but don’t have it under control.”

After the sermons, rescue helpers lit 21 candles for the victims of the tragedy.

The governor of the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia – where Duisburg is located – also gave a speech.

Visibly shaken, Hannelore Kraft talked about the many partygoers who survived the mass panic, in which 500 people were also injured.

Her own son, 17-year-old Jan, attended the Love Parade but was not injured. For several hours after the tragedy, the governor was not able to contact him because the mobile phone system in Duisburg had collapsed.

“There are many thousands who survived but whose souls were injured,” Ms Kraft said. “They are suffering in silence.”

Anger had been building in recent days, with more than 250 people protesting in Duisburg on Thursday and demanding the resignation of the city’s mayor, Adolf Sauerland.

Many people blame Mr Sauerland and the city’s authorities for failing to adequately plan for the event.

Private organisers have also come under fire for allegedly trying to squeeze as many as 1.4 million revellers into too small a space and for allowing only one access point on to the festival grounds.

A preliminary report by police investigators on Wednesday accused the organiser of the Love Parade of major security breaches which may have led to the crush.

But it left many unanswered questions regarding the responsibility of the Duisburg municipality, which was to oversee the event.

The crush occurred in the jam-packed tunnel that was the sole entrance point to the festival grounds.

Since the tragedy, hundreds of people have lit candles, left notes and placed flowers at the site.

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